Britten Choral Guide - Britten

Transcription

Britten Choral Guide - Britten
Britten Choral Guide
with Repertoire Notes by Paul Spicer
1
Benjamin Britten
A Guide to the Choral Works
by Paul Spicer
Preface 3
Mixed Voices unaccompanied 4
Mixed Voices with keyboard 8
Children’s and Upper Voices 11
Choir and Orchestra 15
Choral Music from the Operas 21
Index 23
This Guide to Britten’s choral works, compiled by Paul Spicer, has been prepared by The Britten-Pears Foundation
in conjunction with Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers, Chester Music and Faber Music. For further details
about Britten’s works, please consult Benjamin Britten: A Catalogue of the Published Works (1999), available
from Boosey & Hawkes and viewable online at www.brittenpears.org.
This Guide is included as a PDF on a CD audio sampler, with track numbers referred to within the works listing.
If you are a choral director and would like to receive a copy, please contact your local office of one of the
publishers or distributors listed on page 24.
2
PREFACE
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976) was a unique force in British music. Of the fine composers among his contemporaries, none wrote
such a wide variety of music across such a broad spectrum of genres and for such a range of ages and abilities. In many ways,
though he might have been surprised by the comparison, he was the natural successor to Vaughan Williams, whose instincts for
community and the nurture of amateur musicians brought him an almost cult-like status in Britain. Britten did not devote himself
so wholeheartedly to these things, but a sizeable proportion of his choral music is easily within the reach of a good ordinary choir,
another part is well within the grasp of a reasonable church choir, and there is, of course, all the music he wrote specifically for
children. Among the 60 or so non-operatic choral works there are also works which are exceptionally demanding and perhaps best
left to professionals and outstanding amateurs. The range of this output and the frequency of performance of the better-known
works underline Britten’s ubiquity in the world of choral singing, not just in the English-speaking community but far beyond.
As with many composers who have devoted themselves to writing a large corpus of music for one particular genre, Britten has
suffered from being too well-known for a few familiar pieces. Rejoice in the Lamb, A Ceremony of Carols, Hymn to the Virgin, Hymn
to St Cecilia, Jubilate Deo in C and others have tended to obscure the fuller picture of Britten’s choral output and, if nothing else,
I hope that this new practical guide will encourage choral directors to look beyond their favourites and explore the rich variety
of music which is still almost undiscovered. Schools, or choirs of upper or lower voices, will find music here of wonderful quality
which rarely sees the light of day. Similarly, there is a genuine mix of sacred and secular and some useful blurring of the edges
where words can be equally appropriate in either context. I hope that this guide will also be of real practical help to those who aim
to build programmes which may be structured in specific ways – thematically, by voice type, by religious or non-religious setting,
or by the balancing of a well-known piece by a less-familiar or almost unknown work. It is a spirit of discovery and adventure which
should fire the use of this guide, and it is a love of all this music which has inspired its writing.
Britten was a practical composer. He knew that the music he wrote was performable because he himself was an accomplished
professional musician. This is, again, where the Vaughan Williams analogy holds true. To be there, in among those doing the singing,
directing the performance, advising other conductors and acquiring great expertise and experience over a creative lifetime, gave
him an unusual insight into what choirs enjoy singing. He discovered what levels were attainable by different types of group, and
did much to encourage that sense of ambition which has led to a genuine rise in the quality of amateur choral music-making.
Britten was also a practical composer because he gave his performers all the information they need to deliver a convincing
and ‘authentic’ performance - his scores have clear and unambiguous performance directions throughout. He is known to have
remarked that, if musicians follow his instructions to the letter (and can play or sing the notes in an accurate and musical fashion),
they will give a performance of which the composer would approve. So, before we get to the guide itself, the principal instruction
to choral directors is to prepare the score thoroughly prior to embarking on rehearsals. Read the words in order to understand
Britten’s setting of them, and mark, learn and inwardly digest Britten’s clear instructions about speed, dynamics, phrasing, and,
often most importantly, articulation. The mood of a piece so often comes from the composer’s approach to the text. Britten
tended to choose texts which were not widely set by other composers. But to compare, for instance, his two connected settings
of Gerard Manley Hopkins’ God’s Grandeur in A.M.D.G. and The World of the Spirit with Kenneth Leighton’s version is to clearly
demonstrate the point. No two responses could be more different and yet each excitingly shows the composer’s individual
reaction to the poem. To examine Britten’s popular Jubilate Deo in C alongside Howells’ Collegium Regale setting of the same
words written some fifteen years earlier is, again, to emphasise how their idiomatic interpretations of the text helped shape each
piece.
Britten’s style grew out of the English choral tradition he knew so well. He had not been a cathedral chorister but had boarded
at Gresham’s School from the age of 14. There he was exposed to the standard repertoire of the Anglican Church and his earliest
well-known piece, A Hymn to the Virgin, was written when he was only 16 and still a schoolboy. It unequivocally shows his feeling
for the beauty and potential of choral sound, so it is no wonder that such precocious talent should develop to the extent it did.
While there are pieces from his output which are more stylistically searching, this early gem sets the scene for a choral output that
is essentially approachable, tonal, lyrical, and pleasing to both performer and listener. It is a remarkable legacy.
Paul Spicer, Lichfield, 2011
NOTE:
The difficulty level indicated in the Guide is from 1-5 with 1 being the least difficult.
Sales materials are indicated after each entry. Unless listed on sale, scores and parts are available on hire from the publisher.
3
THE CHORAL WORKS
Advance Democracy (1938)
for SSAATTBB unaccompanied
3’
for the more virtuosic sections, and so on. I can well understand why Britten
distanced himself from these pieces. But, having performed them many times,
I also know how effective they are and how much listeners enjoy them and are
surprised to hear a personal side of Britten’s music they didn’t know.
Text: Randall Swingler
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2
Don’t underestimate the problems, but enjoy the challenges!
Advance Democracy is a piece of unabashed political propaganda commissioned
by the London Co-operative Society. At a time of great anxiety in Europe and
on the eve of the second World War, this poem by Randall Swingler paints a
dark picture of the threat of dictatorship if democracy doesn’t ‘rise up and cry
that what our fathers fought for we’ll not allow to die’. It is a strange piece and
its overtly political message makes it quite difficult to programme except as a
curiosity. Britten, however, paints a very clever picture with a long legato line
moving constantly through the texture from soprano to bass and back much in
the manner which he had used in The Three Kings in A Boy was Born. Around this
swirling figure the other parts sing sharply punctuated chords which are full of
menace. The final section moves into the major (Britten’s brightly flag-waving
C major) and the ending is forcefully emphatic.
0-571-50816-2 Choral score
CD track 11
CD track 31
Mixed Voices unaccompanied
The best way to perform this piece is to take the words at face value and
sing them as Swingler intended, with passion and involvement taking care to
really follow Britten’s careful performance instructions as to articulation and
dynamics.
979-0-060-80035-1 Choral Score
A Boy was Born op. 3 (1932-33)
32’
Choral Variations for unaccompanied* SATB with boys’ voices
Texts:
Theme A Boy was Born
Variation 1
Lullay, Jesu Variation 2
Herod
Variation 3
Jesu, as Thou art our saviour Variation 4
The Three Kings
Variation 5
In the bleak mid-winter
Lully, lulley, lully, lulley
Variation 6
(Finale) Noel!, Welcome Yule
Christmas
A Christmas Carol
Publisher: Chester Music
Anon. 16th century
Anon. before 1536
Anon. before 1529
Anon. 15th Century
Anon. 15th Century
Christina Rossetti
Anon. before 1536
Anon. 15th century
Thomas Tusser
Francis Quarles
CD track 7
Difficulty level: 5
A.M.D.G. (1939)
Ad majorem Dei gloriam
for unaccompanied SATB
*an organ part was created by Ralph Downes in 1957-58 which should only
be used in extremis.
19’
The extent of Britten’s early genius can, to some extent, be measured by this
work. Written while a student at the Royal College of Music aged only 19 it
demonstrates the most precocious creative gifts. A rock-solid technique is
evident, but also the ability to develop ideas over a large span of time (this is
a major work) and, while testing even the best of choirs to its limits, Britten
nevertheless always writes within the grasp of what is possible, and not only
possible but supremely effective. Each movement contributes to the developing
relationship with the initial theme, while also sitting perfectly within the sense
of an unfolding ‘Suite’ of movements. The conductor needs to realise the
tempo relationships and the contrasts of mood, pace and dynamics, and judge
the scale of each movement in relation to the others.
Text: Gerard Manley Hopkins
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 5
Prayer 1
Rosa Mystica
God’s Grandeur
Prayer II
O Deus, ego amo te
The Soldier
Heaven-Haven
One of the issues with this work is that it requires a boys’ choir in addition
to the main choir. This, of course, can also be a girls’ or even a mixed group
of upper voices. It does have to be a separate group, however, and in some
performances they also have their own conductor, but they should not be
placed at a distance due to the intricacy of their part in relation to the whole.
This set of pieces was written when Britten was about twenty-five and had just
arrived in the USA. It was intended for a quartet which Peter Pears had formed
called the Round Table Singers. Because of the outbreak of war the pieces were
never performed in their entirety and Britten withdrew the work and the opus
number (17), giving it many years later to his opera Paul Bunyan (1976). The first
complete performance did not take place until 1984, as Britten had refused to
sanction its publication in his lifetime.
The Theme sets out some of the basic material in a gentle hymn-like manner
and connects directly to the first variation which is based on a rocking figure
of descending fifths shared initially by the two soprano parts, reminiscent of
cooing doves. This is a long and challenging movement though Britten’s voiceleading (where parts can get their notes from others) is mostly helpful. The
second variation, Herod, is predominantly for men’s voices. It is an aggressive,
gruff play on the slaughter of the innocents and Mary and Joseph’s escape
to Egypt. Variation III, Jesu, as Thou art our Saviour, is a beautiful balancing
movement for semi-chorus with a treble solo (which can equally be for a girl’s
or woman’s voice). Variation IV, The Three Kings, is a tour-de-force of vocal
writing. Cleverly using an undulating quaver figure set up by the basses and
shared between the two bass parts initially to present a seamless flow, Britten
creates a feeling of the distant procession of the kings on their camels. All parts
take over the quaver figure at some point and the climax is reached at the
presentation of the gifts after which the music gradually fades away as the kings
return home. This is an intensely satisfying movement to perform. Variation V is
for upper voices singing the wonderful well-known words of Christina Rossetti
In the Bleak Mid-Winter with the boys’ choir singing the powerfully emotional
anonymous words of the Corpus Christi Carol. The Finale, Variation VI, is the
longest and most testing movement lasting nearly ten minutes. Challenges
abound in this variation: rhythm, note-finding, especially for the sopranos in
the first section where their ‘Noel’ figures have seemingly to be plucked out
of thin air; the art of the patter song at the start of the final section ‘Get ivy
and hull, woman, deck up thine house, and take this same brawn for to seethe
and to souse;’ etc; and the sheer relentlessness of the music leading up to the
extraordinary and overpowering climax. It may have been all in a day’s work
for Britten, but it is a north face of the Eiger for most who have to sing it! The
ending is suitably culminatory for a programme finale.
These pieces are seriously demanding and each one presents new challenges.
The choir that can perform the complete score successfully is confident,
ambitious, has a good sense of humour, and has sopranos and tenors capable
of high tessitura work. It helps too if the conductor is something of an amateur
psychologist who can interpret these sometimes tortured poems in the light
of Gerard Manley Hopkins’ Jesuit affiliation (the title is the motto of the Jesuit
order), Britten’s homosexuality and his deep attachment to his mother. Much
time needs to be devoted to teasing out the issues in each of A.M.D.G.’s
movements: the prayer-like first movement which starts on a second inversion
chord as a kind of abject submission to the Deity; the extreme tessitura on
‘Paraclete’, the ‘credo’ plainsong-like doxology phrase which follows, and the
almost tongue-in-cheek ‘Amen’; the mother obsession in Rosa Mystica which
has an equally obsessional, mantra-like ostinato running through much of the
piece (which is extremely beautiful); the almost humorous God’s Grandeur
with its angular subject, its chromatic runs, and its vivid picture-painting; the
complex rhythms of Prayer II which in performance needs to sound effortless
and flowing (the conductor probably has the biggest challenge in this
movement); the different rhythmic challenges of O Deus, ego amo te and its
almost mocking final Amens; the inevitable double entendre for Britten of ‘Yes,
why do we all, seeing of a soldier, bless him?’ in the next movement which is
undoubtedly fun to sing; and the final quietly thoughtful Heaven-Haven which
brings the work to a serene ending.
Pears’ quartet would have been seriously challenged by these pieces which
really need a multi-voiced group to sing them effectively. Breathing is a big
issue, the weight of sound required for various moments, safety in numbers
4
In addition to the challenges and problems already mentioned, one of the
major issues a choir will face is that of tuning. A piece of this length which has
no instrumental support is inevitably going to be prone to tuning problems.
This is especially true in the first Variation where the endless falling fifths have
to be sung in a relaxed manner whilst keeping the ear keenly attuned to the
dangers of going flat. Repeated notes, and figures which keep returning to the
same pitch, need always to be kept on a slightly upward trajectory to keep
them in tune. There is also a great deal of syncopation in this movement set up
by this falling fifth figure. The conductor has to ensure that this does not slow
the movement down. Clarity of beat is hugely important. As has been pointed
out before, Britten is very careful in his marking of the score. Conductors need
to follow his articulation marks in particular, as well as making certain that
the dynamic scheme is varied enough. There needs to be a lot of really piano
singing in a performance of this work.
This is another tour-de-force of Britten’s student years. Written a year before A
Boy was Born when Britten was only in his second term at the Royal College of
Music it was never performed complete in his lifetime. He revived New Prince,
New Pomp for his Aldeburgh Festival in 1955 and Sweet was the Song for the
1966 Festival. As Donald Mitchell and Philip Reed point out in their Preface to
the 1994 edition of the work it ‘shows very clearly how the young composer’s
mind was intrigued by the potentialities of a sequence of texts unified by a
common poetic theme.’ Britten loved Christmas and was drawn to texts about
that season of the year. Christ’s Nativity is very much the product of a young
composer, but parts of it are truly lovely and the work, which is not anything
like as challenging as A Boy was Born, is well worth serious consideration by
choirs planning programmes for the Christmas season.
The first movement is a fanfare which galvanises the listener with its choral
shouts of ‘Awake!’ The second, Sweet was the Song, is for upper voices with
contralto solo and is often performed on its own. This is very much the precursor
of Jesu, as thou art our Saviour from A Boy was Born. A beautiful solo, which
really needs a highly competent singer to sing it effectively, is accompanied by
seated upper voices singing ‘lulla, lullaby’. The third movement, Preparations,
is scored for double choir and is an excited, relentless and more challenging
movement. Highly effective writing and some wonderful vocal sonorities all
add to the charged atmosphere. The final section is long and reflective and a
complete contrast. New Prince, New Pomp uses a soprano soloist with four part
choir. The main section of this movement is a lengthy contrapuntal exercise
in the manner of a double fugue. Britten was obviously showing his teachers
that he could write counterpoint with the best of them. But the result is rather
worthy and only comes alive when the soprano soloist rejoins for the final
section. It is possible to make this section more dramatic than the notes on the
page would seem to indicate, but the conductor needs to take it to heart and
work up a head of steam, perhaps allowing a little piu movimento which leads
the music to a big climax, both emotionally and dynamically, before it subsides
into the soprano solo. The finale is an excited setting of the Carol of King Cnut.
It brings the Suite to a suitably upbeat ending.
A Boy was Born is one of the most excitingly satisfying of Britten’s choral
works. While it should not be undertaken by any but the most ambitious
amateur choirs, its challenges are certainly surmountable with a good run of
rehearsals.
CH76549 Choral score (revised edition with organ)
CH76670 Choral score
Carry her over the water for SSATTBB unaccompanied
see Choral Music from the Operas
Choral Dances from Gloriana
for SATB unaccompanied
see Choral Music from the Operas
Chorale after an Old French Carol (1944)
for SSAATTBB unaccompanied
Christ’s Nativity has many challenges for a choir, but should be perfectly
well within the grasp of a good amateur choral society or chamber choir. A
conductor considering performing the work will need to consider the two solo
movements and whether he or she can field soloists from within his own ranks
to do justice to these movements.
4’
0-571-51513-4 Choral score
Text: W H Auden
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 2
Deus in adjutorium meum... (1944-45) The background to this piece is the same as the Shepherd’s Carol but the music
couldn’t be more different. It is scored for eight part choir with each part
divided. The ‘chorale’ refers to the style of setting of the opening and closing
sections and also to the fact that it is based on the old French carol which we
know better from its use as the hymn tune Picardy, usually sung to the words
‘Let all mortal flesh keep silence’.
Text: Psalm 70
Taken from This Way to the Tomb (incidental music to the ‘Masque and
Anti-Masque’)
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2
These initial and final sections are at one and the same time rich and stark. The
opening and closing chords lacking thirds give the sound world a bare quality.
However, the second phrase soon dispels this image as Britten scores incredibly
rich and widely-spaced chords for the choir to sing. Auden’s words seem like a
parody of the Lord’s Prayer and Britten’s chordal setting seems entirely fitting.
The second verse breaks up into counterpoint (‘Though written by thy children
with a smudged and crooked line’). Britten uses a canonical approach which
includes the melody in inversion as if the ‘smudged and crooked line’ was being
enacted in the music. A huge climax is achieved with first sopranos on top B
naturals. The third and final verse reverts to the chorale style of the first verse
and finishes with a bare fifth.
CD tracks 13 & 18
0-571-51283-6 Choral score
Christ’s Nativity (1931)
Christmas Suite for Soprano, Contralto and SATB,
unaccompanied
Text: 1. Christ’s Nativity
2. Sweet was the song
3. Preparations
4. New Prince, New Pomp
5. Carol of King Cnut
Publisher: Faber Music
17’
This setting of Psalm 70 (Haste thee O God to deliver me) is a fine, passionate
and almost completely overlooked anthem which ought to be in the repertoire
of most cathedrals and ambitious church choirs. The psalm is a dramatic one and
Britten reflects the words in a wide-ranging setting which includes extended
sections for tenors/basses and sopranos/altos. He also sets the Gloria.
This is not a difficult work but it is not entirely straightforward either. There
is no translation in the printed score and conductors need to take a Psalter
and annotate the score with a translation so that the words can be fully
appreciated and a colourful performance created to reflect them. It is well
worth the effort.
979-0-060-01424-6 Choral score
CD track 4
This is a slightly curious hybrid of a piece and it is not entirely surprising that
Britten did not encourage publication in his lifetime. Taken together with the
Shepherd’s Carol, however, they make a fascinating pair of Christmas season
pieces for those looking to programme unusual items in a concert which is not
devoted exclusively to carols.
4’
for SATB unaccompanied
Five Flower Songs op. 47 (1950)
12’
for unaccompanied SATB
Texts: 1. To Daffodils
2. The Succession of the Four Sweet Months
3. Marsh Flowers
4. The Evening Primrose
5. The Ballad of Green Broom
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Robert Herrick
Robert Herrick
George Crabbe
John Clare
Anon.
Difficulty level: 3-4
Henry Vaughan
William Ballet’s Lute Book
Christ Church ms.
Scriptures and Robert Southwell
C W Stubbs
These lovely, classic part-songs were written as a 25th wedding anniversary
present for Dorothy and Leonard Elmhirst of Dartington Hall. Apparently
Britten chose the subject matter because they were keen botanists. Whatever
the reason for the choice, it was a supremely happy one and brought from
Britten a set of pieces which, while in a direct line of descent from the classic
part-songs of Elgar, Stanford and Parry, are entirely original.
Difficulty level: 3-4
5
The hard work is always worth it as a successful performance of this work is
rewarding and memorable.
979-0-060-01449-9 Choral score
CD tracks 16
These songs are designed as a set. The mood-scape shows that Britten was
keenly aware of the variety needed to satisfy performers and audience between
bookends. The unsentimental originality of To Daffodils with its tempo marking
of ‘Allegro impetuoso’ focusing on the speedy demise of the flower which
is of course a metaphor for the passing of life; the clever division into four
voices for the four months in The Succession of the Four Sweet Months and that
beautifully simple device at the end where each month is named and forms a
lovely cadence; the bitter-sweet Marsh Flowers to its poem by George Crabbe
and the way Britten makes a slightly menacing atmosphere relieved only by the
description of gentler plants; the ever-so-slightly sentimental Evening Primrose,
the ‘slow movement’ of the set; and finally Green Broom, a tour-de-force of
humour which is crowned, at its heart, by Britten’s slightly hysterical altos
singing ‘Go fetch me the boy’! The gradual accelerando throughout this piece
leading to the final flourish makes this a wonderful and exciting finale to a set
of part-songs which should be at the heart of any choir’s repertoire.
CD tracks 33
4’
Text: anon (circa 1300)
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
As young as he was, aged only 16, Britten produced in this carol a tiny
masterpiece. This is one of the most well-known and best-loved of his choral
pieces. Understandably so, too. It has all the ingredients which make for a
really satisfying choral experience. The use of a solo quartet or small semichorus, best placed at a distance, brings a dramatic element to the essential
simplicity of the carol. The Latin responses of the semi-chorus to the medieval
English words of the main chorus give these responses a further element of
mystery which adds another layer of spiritual drama. The ratcheting up of the
intensity in the final verse by increasing the tempo, by the ATB of the main
chorus singing continuous rising phrases and by the sopranos singing a short
phrase which is answered by the semi-chorus brings the piece to its climax.
The final tranquillo page leads the carol to its conclusion in a mesmerizingly
beautiful final phrase sung by the semi-chorus.
Care needs to be taken with the speed, the semi-chorus placing, and the
creation of an atmosphere which demands attention from the listener. Speed:
be careful to note Britten’s marking of quaver (1/8th note) = 69-72. This is very
slow indeed. Try it with a metronome. Many conductors perform this piece at
crotchet (1/4 note) = 69! Frankly, I find the original speed too slow to make
this piece flow. I see that when I recorded this with the Finzi Singers we made
a tempo of crotchet = c50. Purists may be dismayed at this wilful ignoring of a
composer’s intentions (especially given the strictures outlined in the Preface
to this Guide). I think if I were to re-record this now, I would choose a tempo
of about quaver = 88. Note that for the quicker final verse Britten suggests
a crotchet tempo. This means he did think about the issues of speed very
carefully.
979-0-060-09511-5 Choral score
for unaccompanied SSATB with SSATB solos
for unaccompanied SATB with solo or semi-chorus SATB
quartet
Difficulty level: 2
Points for choral directors to look out for include the tempo of To Daffodils. The
key is in the direction Allegro impetuoso. Somewhere in the region of crotchet
= 116 should be the aim. Within that tempo use the words to colour the
interpretation. Look out, as always, for Britten’s carefully marked articulation
and watch out for the big dynamic contrasts and colours. Tuning is the issue
in both No.2 and No.3. In the opening of Marsh Flowers be careful of the size
of intervals and in the second bar use the two ‘anchors’ of F and C# to try to
ensure that pitch doesn’t slip. The return to a note which has already been
sung should always be fractionally higher (masked by the change of vowel)
thus ensuring that the pitch is always kept in place. In Green Broom it is issues
of ensemble more than anything which provide the major challenge. This, and
the stepping of increases in speed which should be measured so that the end
does not become dangerously out of hand!
Hymn to St. Cecilia op. 27 (1942, rev.1966)
A Hymn to the Virgin (1930, rev.1934)
11’
also version for solo voices
Text: W.H.Auden
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 4
Placing: Some choirs choose to put the semi-chorus at the other end of
the church, or in a gallery for dramatic effect. Directors, however, have to
remember that while this might work in the first two verses, in the last verse
the two groups sing together and have to balance to some degree. Thought
should also be given to the fact that if the semi-chorus is placed at the other
end of a church behind the audience, the audience sitting near the back will
hear them more strongly than the main choir. It is best to place the semi-chorus
behind the choir but still quite close, perhaps by the altar if the main choir is
in the choirstalls, or just in front of the altar. Always make sure that the semichorus can see the conductor!
This work had a long gestation as Britten had problems finding a suitable text.
Auden was eventually asked and produced the poem in 1940. Britten’s setting
was immediately recognised as a major addition to the choral repertory and
has since become one of his most enduringly popular choral works. It is a nice
coincidence that Britten was born on St. Cecilia’s day (22 November). Cecilia is,
of course, the Patron Saint of musicians who is supposed to have sung praises
to God as she was being martyred. The story of her manner of death makes
gruesome reading and the act of singing in extremis something of a miracle!
Britten responds to Auden’s extraordinary imagery with relish. The poem’s
division into three ‘movements’ gives Britten his musical structure, and the
provision of a refrain (‘Blessed Cecilia, appear in visions to all musicians, appear
and inspire...’) gives a point of reference marking the end of each section, and
of the work. The three ‘movements’ are completely different from each other.
The first has a kind of ‘ground bass’ moving through it started by the tenors
in the first bar and passing between them and the basses. Over this bass, the
upper parts sing flowing compound time phrases which are almost hymn-like.
The refrain at the end of the verse is a unison version of the initial flowing melody
sung by the sopranos.
979-0-060-01451-2 Choral score
Philip’s Breeches (1936)
for SATB unaccompanied
3’
Text: Mary and Charles Lamb
Publisher: EBB Music Publishing (www.brittenpears.org)
Difficulty level: 2
The second section is a scherzo which gives Britten his ‘middle movement’
contrast. This is marked to be sung extremely quickly. Dotted crotchet 152-160 is
almost frighteningly fast! It needs also to be pianissimo and have absolute clarity
of words. A feeling of the ‘ground bass’ from the first section returns as a binding
motif throughout this section in long notes. All highly effective if well sung. The
refrain is a slightly different form of the same melody as before.
This work from Britten’s early twenties was written while on holiday with
Lennox Berkeley in Cornwall in July 1936. The strange thing about its
composition is that the words were only added some months later on the last
day of the year. Quite how he wrote it in the first place not knowing what the
words were to be is not clear. The part song has only recently been published
online by the Britten-Pears Foundation under its EBB Music Publishing imprint.
The final section is more extended and begins with an ostinato bass which feels
slightly menacing. Over this, Britten builds contrapuntal phrases in the upper
parts with longer note values. Four solo voices are featured in the next section,
most of which are recitative-like to be freely declaimed over held choral chords.
The final refrain uses the familiar melody from the opening and brings the work
to its quiet end through some challengingly low notes for second basses.
The poem tells of the growth from boy to man as represented by the change
from short to long trousers (or breeches). It is a very lively piece with the tempo
marking Presto vivace and for the first half of the song it is entirely chordal and
based on rising and falling fourths. Later a slightly regretful falling chromatic
figure marks his feelings at leaving certain childish things behind. But the
mood picks up and the ending romps home with a sense of wild triumph at the
completion of such a rite of passage.
This is a challenging work which should not be undertaken lightly. It needs
sympathetic and careful preparation, understanding of the words, a readiness to
accept the issues raised by the speed of the ‘scherzo’ movement and an ability
to maintain pitch over this time-scale so that the very low notes at the end of
the work are not made even lower through a general flattening. Having said all
this, it is perfectly approachable by an amateur choir of reasonable attainment
providing that enough rehearsal time is allowed for its preparation. The choir also
needs to be able to field five confident soloists. Short as the solos are (except for
the first soprano one which is more extended and different from the subsequent
ones) they present issues which can test a less-confident singer.
A bit of sheer good fun which is very straightforward to sing and which would
be thoroughly enjoyed by an audience either as an encore or in a group of
varied part songs perhaps by a variety of composers.
BTC807 Choral score
6
CD track 9
Sacred and Profane op. 91 (1974-75)
Eight medieval lyrics for unaccompanied voices (SSATB)
16’
The Sycamore Tree (1930, rev.1934/67) for SATB unaccompanied
Texts: Anon. Early English
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 5
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
St. Godrick’s hymn I mon waxe wod Lenten is come The long night Yif ic of luve Can Carol Ye that pasen by A death Text: Traditional
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 2
(mid 12th century)
(later 13th century)
(14th century)
(earlier 13th century)
(earlier 14th century)
(earlier 14th century)
(mid 14th century)
(13th century)
This is a delightful carol which any choir should be happy to include in its
Christmas programmes. It is a setting of the famous ‘I saw three ships’ text
and indeed it was originally called by the more well-known title. Britten gives
us an uncomplicated but wonderfully joyful setting based on a melody with
which the carol begins and which has all the elements of a folk-melody. It is
the kind of melody we think we have always known which adds to the carol’s
approachability. The texture develops as the words dictate until, at the end ‘all
the bells on earth did ring’ and Britten has the voices pealing in scales.
This fascinating and brilliant concert work was written for Peter Pears’ Wilbye
Consort and was therefore written with one voice for each of the five parts in
mind. In reality, rather like A.M.D.G., this is a tall order for the singers and it also
creates a very different kind of performance from a carefully directed choral
performance. The greater freedom and flexibility which a ‘chamber music’
format allows does not necessarily suit such a highly detailed score. There is the
further complication of the requirement to sing properly pronounced medieval
words, so overall this work is not for the faint-hearted. It requires and repays
serious effort, detailed preparation for the pronunciation issues and decisions
about what to do, for instance, in number 5 where the first soprano(s) is/are
given a completely free part, differently barred and notated from the rest of
the choir. This is where a one-voice-to-a-part performance will be much easier
to achieve a natural sounding result than with a multi-voiced group which then
has to be directed to achieve true unanimity of ensemble.
This is a straightforward piece and a choir really only needs a good store of
enthusiasm, energy and the ability to put across a story in words to produce a
good performance (providing they have the notes right in the first place!).
0-571-50096-X Choral score
We are the darkness in the heat of the day (1956) (from The Heart of the Matter)
Text: Edith Sitwell
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 1-2
This short unaccompanied setting formed part of a programme of Edith
Sitwell’s verse put together for the Aldeburgh Festival in 1956. Britten had set
her words to music in his Canticle III ‘Still Falls the Rain. After the performance
Imogen Holst suggested to Britten that he might consider the setting of We are
the darkness in the heat of the day as a separate piece. She prepared the score
for her Purcell Singers but it was never performed in Britten’s lifetime.
The music is a wonderful mix of styles and moods. This is very late Britten,
completed only a year before his death. Here, therefore, is a composer
absolutely on the top of his game, hugely experienced, and writing for a
group of professionals for whom he knew he could be as challenging as he
liked. One of the most satisfying elements of Sacred and Profane, to my mind,
is the humour and boundless good nature which Britten lifts from these earthy
poems. But everything is not always as it might appear. Number 2, for instance,
with its ostinato rhythm set up by the two soprano parts in the first bar, may
seem an amusing song all about birds in the wood and fish in the river – but then
the alto(s) sing ‘and I must go mad, much sorrow I live with...’. Suddenly the
whole picture changes and that ostinato becomes a little drumming obsession
for a simple medieval peasant. But then look at number 8 and see the real
humour which brings this extraordinary cycle to its upbeat conclusion. This
poem recounts the stages leading to a death which doesn’t worry the subject
at all: ‘Then I shall pass from bed to floor, from floor to shroud, from shroud to
bier and the grave. Then rests my house upon my nose. For the whole world I
don’t care a jot!’
The short song is almost madrigalian in character, entirely homophonic
(chordal) and leading to a beautiful and gentle conclusion. This is another of
Britten’s rarities which would add interest to a concert programme featuring
his music or even recreating the spirit of that Aldeburgh programme around
the poetry of Edith Sitwell – and perhaps others.
979-0-060-10585-2 Choral score
Whoso dwelleth under the Defence
of the Most High (1937) 4’
(from The Company of Heaven)
Anthem for SSAATTBB unaccompanied
Text: Psalm 91 (Myles Coverdale)
Publisher: Faber Music
This work is regularly performed by professional ensembles but rarely attempted
by amateurs. It is the preserve of the best but is certainly manageable by really
ambitious and high-achieving amateur choirs as long as sufficient time is given
to mastering the complexities and dealing with the text. It repays careful work
with dividends.
Difficulty level: 3
This is the only unaccompanied movement (9th) in The Company of Heaven,
(see Choir and Orchestra) which was written as a radio feature for the BBC on
the subject of St. Michael and all Angels and broadcast on that feast day (29
September) in 1937 when Britten was 23 years old.
0-571-50086-2 Choral score
for SATB unaccompanied (including SATB solos)
2’
Song for five-part chorus (SMezATB) unaccompanied
The score has a detailed Preface with helpful tips for pronunciation, and it also
gives all the poems which Britten sets in the original early English and with a
modern translation. Additionally, and very helpfully, Britten gives a phonetic
guide to each word in italics in the musical score.
Shepherd’s Carol (1944)
3’
This movement is based on the fifth psalm tone which is sung in unison at the
start and features in many of the phrases which follow. It makes an interesting
and unusual anthem for St. Michael’s day and has a particularly lovely ending.
Although every voice part divides into two (see above) at some points the
piece is not scored for double choir and much of it is in single lines.
4’
Text: W. H. Auden
Publisher: Novello (published in Sing Nowell carol collection)
0-571-51138-4 Choral score
Difficulty level: 1
While Britten and Auden were living in the United States Auden wrote the
text for a Christmas Oratorio which he later re-titled For the Time Being. It
was always intended that Britten would set the poem to music. In the end,
however, Britten returned to the UK and only set two brief portions of the text
when asked to contribute to a BBC radio programme called A Poet’s Christmas.
Britten then set the Shepherd’s Carol and Chorale after an Old French Carol.
Auden had remarked that the text for The Shepherd’s Carol should be set as
either ‘jazz or Folk-song’. Britten’s rather lovely easygoing setting seems to
show that he had listened to Auden’s advice.
The format of this beautifully simple carol is a repeated refrain sung by the
choir (‘O lift your little pinkie, and touch the winter sky...’) interspersed by a
verse each for the four soloists. It is one of Britten’s most touchingly direct
settings. It seems odd that he chose to withdraw it after its first performance.
NOV401436 Choral score
7
CD track 3
Mixed Voices with keyboard
Antiphon op. 56b (1956) 6’
for SATB with three treble/soprano solos (which Britten
indicates can be reduced to one soloist or a semi-chorus)
and organ
ability (desire) to tell the story with a sense of involvement and of passion will
make all the difference to a successful performance.
979-0-060-01394-2 Choral score
Text: George Herbert
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
A Ceremony of Carols
Difficulty level: 3
for SATB and harp
The anthem is an interesting conception and its structure takes its cue both
from the early part of Herbert’s text which says: ‘Praise be the God of Love,
Here below And here above...’, and the end of the poem which says: ‘Praise be
the God alone, Who has made of two folds one.’ It is this division into two which
led him into the idea of two groups of singers. It is more than this, though, as
the first group, the main choir, has two roles, the singing of energetic phrases
in a quicker tempo, and the quiet response to a slower solo line. Having moved
backwards and forwards between these two ‘characters’ the choir eventually
sings an uplifting ‘fugato’ which builds up a terrific head of steam with the
organ part growing into crashing alternate hand chords and the pedals taking
wing from the bottom to the top (literally) of the pedal board. A brief silence,
and a chorale-like line subsides into a magical quiet ending where the three
soloists sing triads to the word ‘one’ whilst the chorus responds with a lower
triad on the word ‘two’. The whole thing resolves onto a widely-spaced chord
of F major and everyone singing the word ‘one’. A slightly sentimental or glib
touch? No, take it at face value after all that has gone before and appreciate
Herbert’s imagery. It is a wonderful resolution of the two elements played out
through the piece.
see Children’s and Upper Voices
CD track 10
This work was written for the centenary of St. Michael’s College, Tenbury. As
so often, Britten uses treble or soprano solos which he indicates should be
sung ‘preferably in a gallery apart from the choir.’ Ever the practical composer,
however, he also allows that these solo parts can be reduced to one voice or
be sung by a small group of voices.
for male voices (T Bar B) and piano (Britten notes that this
should be two pianos if performed by a large chorus)
Text: Book of Common Prayer: liturgy of Morning Prayer
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2-3
979-0-060-01426-0 Organ score
Text: anon: from the Oxford Book of Ballads
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
CD track 26
CD track 8
10’
This work had a curious genesis. Britten’s stance as a conscientious objector
in World War II is well known but his sympathies for those caught up in its
ramifications were as deeply felt as anyone’s. Written in the middle of the war
years, this ballad was composed ‘For Richard Wood and the musicians of Oflag
VIIb – Germany’. Wood had organised a music festival at this officers’ POW
camp at Eichstätt, Bavaria between February and March 1943 and Britten’s
work was performed at seven of the concerts.
7’
This setting is more straightforward than the earlier one. It does, however,
have rhythmic issues which have to be mastered fully to do it justice. The choir,
for instance, must not be pulled off course by the different time signature for
the organ part in the opening and closing sections. It is all very straightforward
in reality, it just looks complicated. Britten has thoughtfully annotated the
vocal rhythm throughout the organ part for safety. The organist needs to be
a confident musician. Where Britten may write eminently practically for the
abilities of a parish church choir, he does not make similar allowances for the
organist and the accompaniment is key to the success of a performance of this
and many other such works.
979-0-060-01390-4 Organ score
Difficulty level: 2-3
for SATB (with treble/soprano solo) and organ
Britten’s second setting of the Te Deum is completely different from the C major
one he wrote eleven years earlier. It was composed for the centenary Festival
of St. Mark’s Church in Swindon – an Anglo-Catholic church with a strong choral
tradition which continues to this day. The structure of the piece is also different
from the earlier work. A lengthy first section in unison which, while carefully
notated in a variety of time signatures so that it feels as if it has the freedom of
Gregorian chant, is accompanied by static organ chords in a regular 3/4 metre.
It is a really imaginative approach, and is actually very simple to perform. While
the organ chords continue, the choir breaks up into simple imitative phrases
at ‘The glorious company of the Apostles praise Thee’ but soon returns to the
unison lines of the opening. The central section (‘Thou art the King of Glory, O
Christ’) has fanfare-like phrases from the choir interspersed by short dramatic
outbursts from the organ which then subside into a rhythmic piano section
with an important ostinato pedal part for the organ. These two ideas are then
mixed together before the opening organ chords return and a treble/soprano
soloist sings a lovely line. The choir joins and takes the canticle to its gentle
conclusion with the soloist having the last word.
As with many other such works, the Antiphon requires an accomplished
organist. The choir also needs to be confident both in their notes and rhythm.
This is a rarely performed work which should really be much better known
and more often performed than at present. It is certainly within the grasp of
a reasonably competent choir looking for less well-known music by a great
composer.
The Ballad of Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard (1943)
Festival Te Deum op. 32 (1945) A Hymn of St. Columba (1962) for SATB and organ
3’
Text: attributed to St. Columba (in Latin)
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2
This short work was commissioned for the 1400th anniversary of the voyage
Columba made from Ireland to the island of Iona. Rather bizarrely, the first
‘performance’ was given outdoors at Churchill, Co. Donegal where St. Columba
was said to have preached and was apparently inaudible because of the
strength of the wind!
The story tells of an unfaithful wife and her lover (Lady Barnard and little
Musgrave) being discovered in flagrante delicto and murdered by the cheated
husband, Lord Barnard. The music is wonderfully descriptive of the tale
beginning with a plodding piano part and the prosaic opening of the tale. As
the baritones and then the tenors join the fray, so intensity grows as the liaison
between the two lovers is laid bare. A ‘little tiny page’ – Lady Barnard’s footman
– overhears the assignation made between the two, and he dashes off to spill
the beans to his master who hastens to catch them red-handed. Musgrave
thinks he hears Lord Barnard’s hunting horn urging his horses to speed on. His
mistress, however, encourages him to lie longer , thinking it is just a shepherd’s
horn. And so the die is cast. The ending is a moving slow threnody as Barnard
laments the death of his wife, urging the gravediggers to put her on top of
Musgrave as ‘she comes from nobler kin’.
The anthem is wonderfully effective and is a very good example of Britten’s
ability to create an original canvas within the traditions of the Anglican Church.
The piece is all about the fire in Columba’s belly for his missionary task. The
words are almost a variation on the Dies Irae: ‘King of Kings and Lord most high,
his day of judgement comes near, Day of wrath and vengeance, Day of shadows
and dark clouds...’ etc. Britten brilliantly sets the mood with a disturbing
pedal ostinato which keeps returning throughout the piece sometimes in the
manuals and often in the pedals. The broad unison melody which begins the
anthem returns at the end briefly as a canon between sopranos/tenors and
altos/basses before closing, without slowing down, with two almost menacing,
but ever-quietening repetitions of the word ‘domini’.
This is a wonderfully dramatic work which will be well within the capabilities
of most reasonable choirs. It needs a group of singers who can sustain longish lines in the slower passages, and counter a possible tendency to flatness
in these sections as well. Care should be taken over the balance between the
three parts and especially over the division between the two bass parts. The
Don’t let the brevity of this work put you off from programming it. In fact,
Britten wrote four ‘Hymns’ (Virgin/St. Peter/St. Columba/St. Cecilia) which work
very well together in a concert and around which an imaginative programme
can be built. Its brevity also makes it either suitable as an introit for a service
8
In performance it is Britten’s direction that it should be sung ‘with fire’ which
should underpin the interpretation. As always, making the most of dynamic
variation will give the work some of its colour. The wonderful moment when,
after a diminuendo, the first theme returns pianissimo and with a crescendo
(...maeroris ac tristitiae, Regis regum rectissimi,) where the words ‘King of
Kings’ are uttered with hushed awe needs special care and thought about tone
quality.
CD track 2
commemorating Columba, or perhaps, at All Souls or even Remembrance. It
would serve equally as an anthem.
CD track 27
for SATB, treble/soprano solo or semi-chorus/organ
6’
Written for the Quincentenary of St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich in 1955 and
based on the plainsong ‘Tu es Petrus’ which is loudly declaimed on the organ
in unison before the choir’s first entry. This more extended anthem picks up
on elements which Britten had used in his Hymn to St. Cecilia thirteen years
earlier. The broad unison melody with which the choral parts start is similar,
however, to the opening of the Hymn of St. Columba. It is the middle section
written as a scherzo which is reminiscent of the section in the St. Cecilia hymn
at figure 8 (‘I cannot grow; I have no shadow to run away from...’). This is also
the part of this anthem which might give less able choirs some trouble. It needs
to be sung ‘quickly and lightly’ as Britten indicates and his metronome mark
at dotted crotchet = 112 is indeed fast! But the notes are not difficult and they
certainly reward detailed work. The next section is a reprise of the opening
which moves into a dying Alleluia. The final section has lovely solo (or semichorus) phrases in Latin separated by very soft choral interjections translating
these phrases into English.
The challenges in this work are many and varied though the difficulty level is
not great overall. It is an ideal concert work and is popular with performers and
audiences alike. Practical issues include really quiet singing while projecting
the voice at the start; dealing with the rhythmic complexities of the first quick
section (‘Let Nimrod the mighty hunter’) and getting the most out of the words
and the dynamic contrasts here; the unanimity of the dotted rhythms in the
Hallelujah sections; the fielding of four soloists who can put across the character
of these zany movements (the cat, the mouse, flowers); the realisation of the
depth of passion in the ‘For I am under the same accusation as my Saviour’
section; the brilliance of the final quick section with all the bizarre musical
instrument rhymes; and finally realising the ‘stillness and serenity’ of the slow
music before the final Hallelujah. There is much to consider and much devil in
the detail. However, the work is emphatically worth any amount of effort to
realise Britten’s inspiration.
It makes a very effective concert or liturgical work (see comments in Hymn to
St. Columba about programming).
979-0-060-01450-5 Choral score
CD track 29
Imogen Holst orchestrated the work for wind quintet, percussion, organ
(ad lib) and strings (1952), and there is also a version for SSAA and organ
arranged by Edmund Walters (1966)
Text: Christopher Smart
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Britten called his work a Festival Cantata and it is structured with choral and
solo movements. The text by the supposedly mad Christopher Smart (17221771) is part of a poem called Jubilate Agno which he composed in a mental
asylum having been committed there by his father-in-law for apparent religious
mania. He died in a debtors’ prison. It was W.H. Auden who brought the poem
to Britten’s attention. It is easy to see why Britten was so attracted to Smart’s
poem. It has great colour, drama, bizarre imagery, and the central issue of
the individual against the crowd, or against authority, was one to which
Britten was to return repeatedly in his works. Britten had developed a deep
interest in Purcell’s music at this time and had made keyboard realisations of
accompaniments for a number of songs which he performed with Peter Pears.
Purcell’s influence can easily be heard in the Hallelujah sections.
Difficulty level: 3
for SATB and organ
17’
One of Britten’s most popular and performed works in this genre, Rejoice
in the Lamb was written for the 50th anniversary of St. Matthew’s church,
Northampton in 1943. The remarkable vicar, Walter Hussey, was a great patron
of the arts. His vision for St. Matthew’s and later for Chichester Cathedral,
where he moved to become Dean, is one of the most fascinating stories in the
history of the Anglican Church in the last century.
Text: from the Gradual of the Feast of St. Peter and St. Paul with Alleluia
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Jubilate Deo in C (1961)
for SATB with SATB solos and organ
Difficulty level: 3
979-0-060-01448-2 Choral score
Hymn to St. Peter op. 56a (1955) Rejoice in the Lamb op. 30 (1943) 3’
979-0-060-01512-0 SATB Choral score
979-0-060-82982-6 SSAA Choral score
Text: Psalm 100 (Book of Common Prayer; Morning Prayer)
Publisher: Chester Music
Difficulty level: 1-2
Song of the Fishermen
This is another of Britten’s best-known and most often performed short choral
works. With its lively and spirited organ accompaniment and its simple and
direct vocal phrases it positively bubbles with the joyful mood of the words.
Short and to the point, it is also straightforward and well within the reach of
most choirs. It does need a competent organist who can perform rhythmically,
and play scales!
for SATB and piano
see Choral Music from the Operas
Tallis’s Canon CH76560 Choral score
for SATB chorus, unison voices and organ or piano
accompaniment.
see Choral Music from the Operas
Jubilate Deo in Eb (1934)
for SATB and organ
3’
Te Deum in C (1934)
Text: Psalm 100 (Book of Common Prayer: Morning Prayer)
Publisher: Faber Music
9’
for SATB/treble or soprano solo/organ or orchestra (harp or
piano and strings)
Difficulty level: 2
Text: Book of Common Prayer: liturgy of Morning Prayer
Publisher: Chester Music
This early work was withdrawn by Britten for some reason and was not
published until 1984. It was written as a companion piece for the C major Te
Deum for St. Mark’s, North Audley Street, London, though intriguingly he wrote
it in Eb major rather than C major. It may not have the same spark of genius as
many of his other choral works, but it is a perfectly serviceable setting with
broad singable lines and a straightforward organ part. An interpretation with
some imagination can make the piece work well and leave a strong impression
of these uplifting words.
Difficulty level: 3
Britten wrote few canticle settings, only two Te Deums, two settings of the
Jubilate and a Venite which was not published in his lifetime. He wrote no
settings of the Evening Canticles for the Anglican rite. The settings we have
are therefore all the more precious and, as always, show the originality of his
creative mind. This Te Deum is, to my mind, the finest of these liturgical settings.
It has drama, energy, variety, and clarity and integrity of structure. The opening
page sets the scene and introduces the pedal syncopated ostinato which
underpins the whole of the first section and the ‘reprise’ when it comes after
the contrasting central section. The voices climb from the bass up to soprano
in quietly urgent statements of ‘We praise you’ and build to a huge climax at
‘Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabaoth’. The central section is given to a treble
or soprano soloist with the choir reinforcing his or her phrase ends with quietly
urgent chords and the words ‘O Christ!’ Longer phrases develop and lead to
the reintroduction of the pedal ostinato and the initial choral material. Another
thrilling climax is reached before the beautiful quiet ending.
0-571-50724-7 Choral score
Old Joe has gone fishing
for SATB and piano
see Choral Music from the Operas
9
Few cathedrals or churches sing the Office of Matins these days for which
this canticle was intended and so its original liturgical setting is rarely possible
nowadays. It is much more of use as an anthem or as a concert item and it
is, of course, extremely effective in either rôle. The challenges in this work
are as much for the conductor as the choir. The conductor needs to see the
big picture, relate the first and last sections and prevent the central one from
becoming sentimental or too slow. He/she needs to make sure that Britten’s
directions about tempi are fully understood, and which tempo he means when
he directs Tempo I or II etc. For the choir, it is the ability to sing quietly with
abundant energy, to have absolute clarity of diction, to note the details of
articulation – the staccato marking, for instance, on the word ‘Lord’ in bar 54,
and similar markings in the central section. This is an outstanding setting of
these much-set words and it should be far more widely performed.
Voices for Today is an example of a substantial choral work by Britten which
is almost never performed. It was composed for the 20th anniversary of the
United Nations and was given three simultaneous premieres in London, New
York and Paris. Note-wise it is not as difficult as Sacred and Profane for instance,
but it is not easy, and it is not an immediate work to grasp as it is unlike any
other in Britten’s output. Its performance complexities add to these issues.
Britten has scored the work for a main chorus part for SATB and a separate
boys’ choir (which, of course, can be boys and girls or just girls) which he
indicates should be in a gallery if possible with its own conductor. His detailed
performance instructions show how these two groups should operate. ‘The
boys’ part has no regular measured tempo, but its rhythm is shown by dotted
barlines... The speeds of the two choruses are usually not the same, but the
beats must coincide whenever there is a long barline running from top to
bottom of the system.’ Further instructions are given including singing the
work in the performers’ vernacular (except for Virgil’s Eclogue).
CH76582 Vocal score
CH76593 Full score
If it all sounds complicated and off-putting it should be given its chance to
shine through a committed performance. In some ways it shares a mindset
with Advance Democracy in that it is a politically motivated work whose text
advocates the peace which Britten so passionately believed in and which later
on was writ large in the War Requiem. In reality, what sounds complicated in
the coordination of the two choirs is perfectly straightforward to realise as
Britten gives ‘curlew’ signals in the score where either choir can hold while
the other completes its phrase, so that a point of required ensemble can be
reached at the same moment.
Two Part-Songs I lov’d a lass (1932) 2’
Lift Boy (1932) 3’
for SATB and piano
Texts: George Wither (I lov’d a lass) and Robert Graves (Lift Boy)
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2
After a richly scored opening ‘If you have ears to hear, then hear!’ the music
becomes almost surprisingly spare as if Britten wants maximum clarity from
the singing of the words. He wants his points made clearly and concisely.
The boys’ choir does not join until the extended setting of Virgil which is
at approximately the half -way point. Here, the choir sings short chantlike phrases divided by commas while the boys sing a wordless melody at a
completely different speed, ignoring the commas of the main choir but having
key moments of common arrival. The music of the main choir develops with a
variety of textures and dynamic contrasts reflecting the text. Eventually, in the
final section, the boys divide into two parts singing the words of the opening
(quoted above) and the choir sings Virgil’s closing words (in Latin) ‘Start now,
little boy, by greeting your mother with a smile. Her ten months’ pregnancy has
been long and tiring. Start now little boy...’ (The ten months is within the scale
of the Julian calendar).
These are two delightful and contrasted part-songs for choir and piano which
ought to be a gift to choirs looking for rare secular repertoire for their concert
programmes. I lov’d a lass is full of fun, while the challenge lies in the regularly
changing metre. The choir’s first bar is in 7/8 and is followed by 5/4 and then
3/4. Later on Britten gives us 3/4, 7/8, 11/8, 4/4, 5/4, 7/8, 4/4 in successive bars
but this all adds to the entertainment. There are lots of portamenti too in what
adds up to a passionate little piece.
Lift Boy sets a nonsense poem by Robert Graves about a boy who starts life
as a knife-boy, moves on to become a lift boy and then a lift man. Preached
damnation by ‘Old Eagle’ one day, he cuts the lift cables and down they all go.
But Graves ends by saying: ‘Can a phonograph lie? A song very neatly contriv’d
to make you and me laugh.’ Curious indeed. But Britten obviously sees the
humour in it with a busy piano part accompanying straightforward choral
passages which have nothing of the complexity of metre of the previous song.
The message of damnation is delivered in suitably solemn tones before the
piece dances off to its laughing ending.
I lov’d a lass
Lift Boy
979-0-060-01454-3
979-0-051-41850-3
There is an organ part which can be used and which Britten noted ‘should be
used primarily when the resonance of the building is inadequate’. In my opinion
the organ part enhances the work.
0-571-50020-X Choral score
Choral score
Choral score
A Wedding Anthem (Amo Ergo Sum) op. 46 (1949)
Venite Exultemus Domino (1961)
for SATB and organ
for SATB with soprano and tenor soloists and organ
6’
Text: Ronald Duncan
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Text: Psalm 95 (Book of Common Prayer: Morning Prayer)
Publisher: Chester Music
Difficulty level: 3-4
This anthem, which is really more like a mini cantata than an anthem, was
written for the marriage of the Earl of Harewood and Marion Stein. It took
place in St. Mark’s, North Audley Street, London, the church for which Britten
had written his C major Te Deum and Eb Jubilate. The original soloists were Joan
Cross and Peter Pears and Britten conducted.
Difficulty level: 1-2
This work was not published in Britten’s lifetime but it was obviously intended
as a companion work to the Jubilate in C as it was written in the same year. It
wasn’t performed until 1983 when it was given its premiere in Westminster
Abbey under Simon Preston. The choir sings chant-like phrases almost in the
manner of Anglican chant. The organ joins the end of a phrase and modulates
where it will from where the choir picks up and travels to a further place. The
phrases are varied dynamically but the greatest colour is given via the medium
of key change.
The difficulty with this work is that it really requires two professional soloists to
do it justice. The choir begins the anthem and Britten uses the Ave Maria which
Duncan places at the beginning and end of the first verse like a peal of bells. It
is wonderfully effective. It is also used as a refrain. The second section (verse) is
marked ‘Recitative’ and is for soprano solo. The early freedom implied by that
term gives way to an Andante comodo and the soloist sings a beautiful lyrical
setting of Duncan’s imaginative words. The choir returns with a piano version
of the ‘Ave Maria’ as a refrain and the tenor soloist takes over for verse three.
Britten’s flowing organ accompaniment takes its cue from the opening words
here: ‘As mountain streams find one another Till they are both merged there
in a broad, peaceful river...’ This is another extended and lovely solo for the
tenor. In verse four, the choir rejoins for a brief refrain using the opening words
of the anthem, and the soloists now sing a lively, playful duet. The ending for
everyone is a quietly ravishing ‘Amen’.
It is a curiously effective piece. Time is almost suspended, and once the listener
has got over the surprise at its means and has settled into focusing on the
words, the music takes on a life of its own. The gentle Gloria is especially
effective.
CH76571 Choral score
Voices for Today op. 75 (1965)
10’
10’
Anthem for Chorus (men, women and children) with organ
accompaniment (ad libitum)
This is another work of Britten’s which is almost never performed. The
choral parts are not difficult and the organ part is less challenging than some
of Britten’s other choral/organ works. Only the solo parts would seem to
represent a barrier to a regular performance profile for the anthem. These are
not difficult solos in themselves, but do need singers who can project a real
sense of the ‘solo’ and also have an easy top Bb (both soloists) which can be
managed without fuss in a lovely rising scale situation.
Difficulty level: 4
979-0-060-12018-3 Vocal/Piano score
Text: At the suggestion of E.M. Forster and Peter Pears, Britten chose a
selection of ‘sentences or verses from the great peace lovers of history’:
Jesus Christ, Asoka, Sophocles, Lao Tzu, Bright, Penn, Melville, Camus, Lec,
Yevtushenko, Blake, Hölderlin, Tennyson, Shelley and Virgil.
Publisher: Faber Music
10
for boys’ or female voices and harp (piano in extremis but
with alterations and omissions)
22’
There is also a version for SATB and harp arranged by Julius Harrison
Texts: Latin and English
1. Procession (using a variant of the Magnificat
antiphon for the second Vespers
of the Nativity of Our Lord)
2. Wolcum Yole! (anon.)
3. There is no rose (anon.)
4a. That yongë child (anon.)
4b. Balulalow (James, John and Robert Wedderburn)
5. As dew in Aprille (anon.)
6. This little babe (Robert Southwell)
7. Interlude (harp solo)
8. In Freezing Winter Night (Robert Southwell)
9. Spring Carol (William Cornish)
10. Deo gracias (anon.)
11. Recession (as for Procession)
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
CD track 21
A Ceremony of Carols op. 28 (1942, rev.1943)
19’
Scoring: 6 solo perc (small gong, bd, susp cymb, small cymb, wb, trng, sd,
tabor, 2 glock, tamb, bells, td, xyl, scraper, gong, t-t)/tutti perc (‘divided into
three categories which can include any of the following instruments, tuned:
t bells, xyl, vibr, glock, cel; rhythmic: sd, td, tabor, bd, wb, tamb, castanets,
rattle, trng, susp cymb; clashed or ringing: clashed cymb, trng, gong or t-t,
anvil, cowbells, sleighbells)/2 pianos, chamber or electronic organ.
Text: Berthold Brecht translated by Hans Keller
Publisher: Faber Music
The choral parts are all for unbroken voices though there is one solo part which
Britten allocates to a ‘tenor’ though, in reality, he is still thinking of this as a
child’s voice which is ‘on the cusp’ – an alto in chest voice.
The Children’s Crusade is another war piece. Coming after the War Requiem
where he had unburdened his soul in relation to his pacifist convictions, he
still wanted to take up Wilfred Owen’s assertion that ‘all a poet can do today
is warn. That is why the true poet must be truthful.’ This piece is another
demonstrating the futility of war, witnessed through the eyes of a group of
brave Polish children in the face of overwhelming odds. It is a moving work on
various levels, but the immediacy of Brecht’s imagery (the dog adds further
to the poignancy of the story) coupled with Britten’s decision to use children
to perform it, leaves an indelible impression on the mind of the listener, and
undoubtedly the performer – as was obviously intended.
The Ceremony of Carols is one of Britten’s best-known and most-performed
works. It is a brilliantly conceived and dramatic concert work which sees the
voices process to their places singing unaccompanied plainsong and, at the
end, processing out again to the same chant. These movements can also be
accompanied but strictly only if the voices do not process. The final Alleluia can
be repeated as many times as necessary to get the singers to and from their
destination.
The carols are for three-part children’s voices (though, of course they can
be sung by female adults as well) and they form a two-part work around a
central Interlude for harp which is based on the plainsong from the Procession.
Variety is the key word here as all the carols have such individual identities. The
forthright Wolcum Yole!, the deliciously lyrical There is no Rose, the swinging
Balulalow, the fiery and dramatic This little Babe all contribute to a work which
is a feast of discovery throughout. Lovely solos and duos add further colour
and the harp part, an inspired choice of accompaniment, enriches, colours
and surrounds the voices with its pictorial musical imagery. If anything shows
Britten’s genius for writing for voices it must be this work.
This is not an easy work. Unlike the light-hearted Welcome Ode this is a
major undertaking. Britten is, as usual, very clear in his intentions and writes
a helpful explanatory preface. He notes that two conductors are probably
necessary especially as there are times when the voices and the instruments
follow different tempi. He uses a ‘curlew’ sign – as he did in Voices for Today
and elsewhere – to indicate when one group must wait for the other before
continuing. Compared with some of the convoluted aleatoric or improvisatory
passages required by contemporary composers Britten’s devices are fairly
straightforward and are clearly notated. They should not hold undue terrors for
modern performers. However, they do require understanding and performance
discipline and conductors who will be clear in their directions.
The challenges here are in creating a real equality between voice parts, fielding
a confident pair of soloists, and making the most of the wonderfully colourful
poems Britten has chosen to set. Pronunciation is not really an issue, but when
I recorded this work with the Finzi Singers I decided to follow the example
of Sacred and Profane and use authentic medieval pronunciation for which an
expert coach was necessary. It brings an added element of colour to a familiar
aural experience.
Britten asks for nine soloists. These are all children from the choir who, as
Britten directs, ‘should stand and sit where marked in the score’. One sings out
of sight. The vocal parts are not particularly difficult though they are certainly
not easy. The keyboard parts provide a good deal of support in terms of
starting notes etc. But this is never done obviously and the singers will have to
know how to hear what they are being offered in support.
Complete editions:
979-0-060-01410-9 SSA Choral score
979-0-060-01411-6 SATB Choral score
979-0-060-01412-3 Harp part
The bottom line in this piece is that these young people are never being written
down to. Britten writes a work which challenges them on every level – including
the nature of the story. That makes Children’s Crusade a hugely worthwhile
work to rehearse and perform. With today’s emphasis on co-education the
involvement of girls with boys makes the whole thing far more achievable in
every sense than it might have been at the time of its premiere.
Separate editions:
2. Wolcum Yole!
979-0-060-01561-8 SSA Choral score
979-0-051-41826-8 SATB Choral score
3. There is no rose
979-0-060-01544-1 SSA Choral score
979-0-060-82979-6 SATB Choral score
Rediscover a dramatic and involving score. This is a kind of Noye’s Fludde but
exclusively for children.
0-571-50332-2 Choral score
0-571-50330-6 Full score
4b: Balulalow
979-0-051-41916-6 SSA Choral score
5. As dew in Aprille
979-0-060-01391-1 SSA Choral score
8. In Freezing Winter Night
979-0-060-01455-0 SSA Choral score
A Ballad for Children’s voices and orchestra
This is a big serious piece for children – yet another fine example of Britten
writing a major work with a serious subject at its heart for young people to
both sing and play. The huge array of percussion is designed to be played by
school children supplemented by a few teachers/adults. The piano and organ
parts are specifically designed to support the singers and to help with providing
the pitch for starts of phrases and often with continuation as well.
Difficulty level: 3
6. This little babe
979-0-060-01545-8 SSA Choral score
979-0-060-82980-2 SATB Choral score
The Children’s Crusade op. 82 (1969) Difficulty level: 3-4
CD track 12
CD track 19
Children’s and Upper Voices
9. Spring Carol
979-0-060-01532-8 SA Choral score
Fancie (1961, rev.1965) for unison/optional three part voices and piano
1’
Text: Shakespeare
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 1
This was originally one of three settings of Shakespeare texts by different
composers – the others being Kodály and Poulenc. It is classic Britten:
lovely singable lines, colourful piano part and a highly effective division into
three parts at the end in the revised version. It would programme well with
The Oxen.
10. Deo gracias
979-0-060-01419-2 SSA Choral score
979-0-060-01420-8 SATB Choral score
979-0-060-01423-9 Choral score
11
CD track 35
Friday Afternoons op. 7 (1933-35) Twelve children’s songs with piano accompaniment
23’
‘who had no business...on the waters of the lowland sea’. The Turks turned
out to be pirates and the captain of the Golden Vanity first thought of turning
around and running for safety. His crew had other thoughts, however, and a
broadside was fired which fell hopelessly short. While re-loading their cannons
on the starboard side the Turks sailed to the port side and fired a broadside
which disabled the Golden Vanity. Scared witless, the captain feels that all is
lost and that they will be captured and sold into Turkish slavery. However, he
reckons without the plucky young cabin boy who respectfully offers to sink
the Turkish ship, but not before first asking that his reward should be to marry
the captain’s beautiful daughter. There is general ridicule on all fronts from
the crew, the Bosun being especially despairing as he had set his sights on the
same girl. But the brave young cabin boy is as good as his word, strips off, dives
overboard and, with a small spike, sets about gouging holes in the hull of the
Turkish ship. The Turks are celebrating and gaming above and do not notice
their ship filling up with water. Panic and confusion follow as the ship sinks.
Wild celebration erupts from the Golden Vanity. The cabin boy swims back but
is overlooked. He tries to attract the attention of the Captain and the bosun
who purposefully ignore him: the captain because he cannot conceive of such
a match for his daughter, the bosun because he wants her for himself. The boy
swims around the other side of the ship and appeals to his messmates to save
him but they are too late and when he is lifted out of the water he is dead. His
cries of ‘sinking, sinking’ will haunt them all forever. The Captain and his bosun
‘turned away but found we couldn’t weep, ashamed of the promises we never
did keep – for the thought of the cabin boy no more shall we sleep, while we
sail on the Lowland sea’.
Texts:
1. Begone, dull care (anon.)
2. A tragic story (William Makepeace Thackeray)
3. Cuckoo! (Jane Taylor) (in 2 parts, 2nd ad lib.)
4. “Ee-Oh!” (anon.)
5. A New Year Carol (anon.)
6. I mun be married on Sunday (Nicholas Udall)
7. There was a man of Newington (anon.)
8. Fishing Song (Izaac Walton)
9. The useful plough (anon.)
10. Jazz-Man (Eleanor Farjeon)
11. There was a monkey (anon.)
12. Old Abram Brown (anon.) (in 4 parts)
(13.) Lone Dog (Irene Mc.Leod)
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 1-2
This set of mainly unison songs for young voices is a gift for a concert of music
for upper voices. It is a substantial work taken as a whole but its individual
movements are both short and straightforward in their various challenges.
Britten wrote the work for the boys of his brother’s preparatory school (age
7-13), Clive House, Prestatyn, in Wales to sing. However he encountered a
problem with copyright over the use of the Lone Dog. He therefore wrote
Begone, dull care to replace it. When these issues were resolved years later the
song was included as an appendix item in the 1994 edition.
The work divides the choir into two, representing the two ships. It also requires
various soloists to sing the parts of the Captain (alto), Bosun (treble) and Cabinboy (treble) from the first, and Pirate Captain (alto) and Pirate Bosun (treble)
from the second. Britten asks that there should be no scenery as such but only
a few props such as ropes and telescopes. The boys should dress in costume
but mime the actions. A drum is used to represent the cannon fire. The two
‘boats’ should have pennants to identify them.
The real beauty of these songs is that Britten never writes down for the children.
These are art songs in the best sense of the word and mix both dark and light
humour with seriousness and romance to create a little world of changing
scenes and emotions. The texts are, as always, carefully chosen to give Britten
maximum variety of mood and to challenge and encourage the children’s
interest and involvement. The piano parts carry a lot of the responsibility for
the creation of mood and atmosphere and ideally need a pianist of reasonable
accomplishment to do them justice. In There was a monkey Britten writes an
increasingly challenging part which is very effective in making the charged
mood rise to its climax. However, he writes an easier alternative part which
can be played if the pianist finds the other too difficult.
Compared with the Children’s Crusade this is a very straightforward work. It is
another example of Britten’s ability to write a serious work in a light format
and in a simple enough style to be widely taken up and thoroughly enjoyed.
The element of simple drama increases its appeal (the boys march in and out,
for instance). The insistence on simplicity of production lends further appeal to
hard-pressed music and art departments.
The mixture of texts gives Britten wonderful opportunities for word painting.
The lively Begone, dull care which opens the work, the nonsense poem of A
tragic story where a man wants his pigtail to hang in front so he can see it, the
gentle story of the Cuckoo and his progress through the months of the year,
the rather sobering story (especially in our post-fox hunting ban days) of the
shooting of a fox by a farmer whose geese it has killed, the sublime A New
Year’s Carol – and so on, leading to the powerful four part canon of Old Abram
Brown. These little pieces demonstrate so clearly Britten’s genius – his ability to
write really good music which is so recognisably his – without any feeling that
he is making compromises for the young singers.
The musical phrases are simple enough to sing and there are only very few
moments when harmony is required and the boys split into parts. The refrain
‘...and she sailed upon the Lowland Sea’ is always given a chord on the first
syllable of ‘Lowland’ each time it is sung (this is slightly extended for the very
final phrase of the work). For the rest, the music is divided into the two parts
representing the two ships. The pianist needs to be competent and rhythmically
supportive.
0-571-50107-9 Chorus part (Eng/Ger)
0-571-50106-0 Vocal score (Eng/Ger)
0-571-55492-X Vocal score (Fr)
979-0-060-10500-5 Choral score
Separate editions:
CD track 14
No. 2 A Tragic Story
979-0-060-01548-9 Choral score
No. 5 A New Year Carol
979-0-060-01473-4 Choral score
for unison voices and piano
2’
Text: traditional
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 1
Text: Colin Graham
Publisher: Faber Music
This is a simple arrangement of a folk melody collected by Cecil Sharp. Neither
the voice part nor the piano part is difficult but, as always, the writing is
supremely effective. It was composed for the London Boy Singers and was
premiered by them at the 1962 Aldeburgh Festival with Britten at the piano.
The first three verses are all the same, the fourth has subtle changes which add
a touch of spice to the whole. In performance it is the words which need to be
really put across and given dynamic interest, variety and projection.
Difficulty level: 2
979-0-060-01457-4 Choral score
The Golden Vanity op. 78 (1966) 17’
A vaudeville for boys and piano after the old English ballad
This work for treble voices (it really needs to be boys because of the subject
matter) is another gift for schools – or for those communities or towns which
still have boys’ choirs. Its subject matter is heavily masculine but, like a lot of
Britten’s more searingly emotional works, involves the individual against the
crowd, the powerful against the underdog, the power of impossible love, and
the ultimate weakness of those who are supposed to be leaders. There is a lot
of Billy Budd in The Golden Vanity. To this end, like the Children’s Crusade (see
separate entry under ‘works with orchestra’), there is an unspoken moral to
the story which Britten hoped would seep into the children’s consciousness
and be a direction indicator for their adult morality. This, he hoped, might be a
small step in helping to make the world a better and a fairer place.
CD track 23
CD track 25
No. 12 Old Abram Brown
979-0-060-01485-7 Choral score
King Herod and the Cock (1962) Missa Brevis in D op. 63 (1959) for boys’ (upper) voices and organ
11’
Text: Ordinary of the Roman Rite (Latin)
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2-3
Like the Ceremony of Carols this work is one of Britten’s most performed
and well-loved works for upper voices. It was written for George Malcolm’s
outstanding boys at Westminster Cathedral with their distinctively bright
continental tone. Many other types of upper voices have since adopted it, of
course, and these days it is as much performed by women or girls, or mixed
boys’ and girls’ voices as by boys alone. The Missa Brevis requires three soloists,
The story is simple. The Golden Vanity, laden with gold and silver coins, sets
out to sail ‘the lowland sea’ when she soon encountered a Turkish galleon
12
though it is possible to make it work with only two. The choir is divided into
three voice parts, the third of which needs to be able to produce low As.
described in the verses of the psalm to colour his composition. The delightful,
dancing 7/8 rhythm of ‘Praise him with the sound of the trumpet’ makes an
irresistible, light-hearted and toe-tapping section before the culminatory ‘Let
everything that hath breath praise the Lord’. A Gloria gives the work a suitably
climactic ending.
The work is incredibly fresh and original. Part of this is Britten’s organ part
which is no ‘accompaniment’ but rather an equal partner in the realisation of
the text in music. Britten’s direction in the Kyrie that the voices should sing
‘passionately’ underpins the approach to the performance of the whole work.
It is an intensely dramatic reading of these familiar words. The grave passion
of the Kyrie, the rhythmic ebullience of the Gloria with its 7/8 time signature
and its colourful dynamic contrasts, the pealing bells of the Sanctus, the slow,
measured tread of the Benedictus (the gentle march of ‘Blessed is he who
comes in the name of the Lord’) for two solo voices followed by the tutti for
the pealing Hosanna, and finally, a rather dark and troubled Agnus Dei which
impresses through its relentless intensity and its final exhausted staccato
utterance of ‘dona nobis pacem’.
This is another brilliant, flexible and involving work for children. At only six
minutes duration it can form a magical item in a school concert without the
additional challenges of scenery/choreography which some of his other works
for young people can involve.
979-0-060-01504-5 Vocal/piano score
979-0-060-01505-2 Choral score
979-0-060-04664-3 Set of parts
979-0-060-04663-6 Full Score
While not as difficult note-wise as the Ceremony of Carols (and being far
shorter as well), there are still plenty of challenges for any group of voices that
undertakes this work. It needs three really equal voice parts and solo voices
that can sing with confidence and conviction. Tuning issues will also arise at key
points, and the ability to tune three part chords instinctively is needed in much
of the work. It also helps if the organ which plays with the voices has a suitable
range of colours to realise Britten’s intentions.
Rejoice in the Lamb
for SSAA and organ
see Mixed Voices with keyboard
979-0-060-01469-7 Vocal score
979-0-060-01470-3 Choral score
O can ye sew cushions? (1942) arranged for SSA and piano by Imogen Holst
Rossini Suite (1935) for boys’ voices and chamber ensemble
Scoring: fl (=picc), ob, cl; 2 perc (xyl, sd, bd, cymb, trng,
glock, tamb, susp cym, wb, castanets); piano
3’
Text: Wordless
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Text: Traditional Scottish
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 1 (chorus)
This is essentially a chamber ensemble work with a wordless boys’ chorus
adding another element to the scoring. I quote Paul Banks’ Britten Catalogue
as to the background of the work:
Difficulty level: 1
Britten made many folk song arrangements throughout his life with those
from the British Isles becoming particularly popular. Imogen Holst, Britten’s
amanuensis for many years, made an arrangement of this song for SSA which
simply fills out the harmony for the lower parts in well-written singing lines.
‘These arrangements were made in connection with Lotte Reiniger’s short
animated silhouette film The Tocher (GPO Film Unit, 1935), but in the event
only music from nos 1, 2 and 5 was used on the soundtrack (conducted
by Britten). In 1936 nos 1, 2 and 4 were rescored and with two new
arrangements formed Soirées musicales, op.9. In 1941 no.3 was reworked
as the opening march of Matinées musicales.’
CD track 15
979-0-051-45213-2 Choral score
The Oxen (1967) 12’
3’
Text: Thomas Hardy
Publisher: Faber Music
The boys’ voices are used in two movements only. In the second they sing a
beautifully lyrical wordless melody to an ‘ah’ vowel or as a hum. In the fifth and
final movement they sing a madrigalian ‘tra la la’ in an Allegro con brio which is
irresistibly lively and ends with a shout!
Difficulty level: 1
979-0-060-83650-3 Piano reduction
Carol for women’s voices (two parts) and piano
Peter Pears’ sister asked Britten to write this carol for publication in the
National Federation of Women’s Institutes’ Book of Carols (1968). All the
Somerset branches of the WI were asked to submit possible texts for Britten
to choose from. Hardy’s well-known poem ‘Christmas eve, and twelve of the
clock’ brought from Britten a beautiful setting in which the piano part mirrors
the tolling of the clock for midnight. It is in three clear sections with the central
section being quicker before moving back to the original material for the
final part. It is straightforward for singers and memorably effective. It would
programme well with Fancie.
Sweet was the song
for upper voices with contralto solo
see Christ’s Nativity in Mixed Voices unaccompanied
Three two-part songs (1932) 0-571-51860-5 Choral score (Part of Three Carols for Upper Voices)
1. The Ride-by-nights
2. The Rainbow
3. The Ship of Rio
6’
CD track 28
for boys’ or girls’/women’s voices and piano
Psalm 150 op. 67 (1962) for two part children’s voices and instruments
Texts: Walter de la Mare
Publisher: Chester Music
6’
Difficulty level: 1
Scoring: Treble instr 1, Treble instr II, bass instr, 2 perc (timps, sd or tamb,
cymb, susp cym, trng, tamb or castanets), keyboard. Optional parts,
transposed if necessary, for 2 cl; tpt, hn, trbn; va
Text: Psalm 150 in English
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
These are three lovely songs making a really delightful set in a concert
programme. They were originally called Three Studies in Canon and that says
all that needs to be said about how these pieces are structured. Britten loved
writing in canon and seemed to tease out the fun of having voices leading
and following each other. Remember that fabulous three-part canon in the
Ceremony of Carols: This little babe as one of the most brilliant examples.
Difficulty level: 1-2
This setting of the great psalm of praise which concludes the Psalter is typical
of Britten’s compositions for schools. It was composed for the centenary of
Britten’s own prep school – Old Buckenham Hall School (called South Lodge
School when he was there) – which he attended between 1923 and ’28. As can
be seen from the scoring details above it is intended that as many children as
possible can be involved in the performance by playing a variety of instruments
which are not specifically detailed. So, there are two ‘treble instrument’
parts which might be anything from a recorder to a violin or flute and a ‘bass
instrument’ which might be a ’cello or a bassoon – and so on. The voice parts
divide into four (a canon at ‘let everything that hath breath praise the Lord’)
but are basically in two parts and there is a great deal of unison singing.
These pieces are very straightforward for all participants – piano and voices
and are ideal material for schools or for upper voice choirs looking for original
material which lights a special touch paper.
As one might expect, Britten makes full use of the different forms of praise
Difficulty level: 1
CH76615 Choral score
The Twelve Apostles (1962) for tenor solo, unison chorus and piano
Text: traditional
Publisher: Faber Music
13
6’
This piece was first performed along with King Herod and the Cock by the
London Boy Singers (see the entry above). It is interesting to note that Britten
originally intended a larger-scale work which would have become his Canticle IV
but what he wrote was beyond the capabilities of the London Boy Singers and
so Britten switched track leaving the other work unfinished and wrote these
two folk song arrangements instead.
The tune of this song is well-known, lively, and perfect for singing by a group
of children. The pianist takes the weight of responsibility for creating the right
mood to support the singers. The idea of using a tenor soloist in dialogue with
the children is brilliant. Not only does it add colour and texture but an element
of drama as well. The ending rushes madly for the final barline!
0-571-50595-3 Choral score
A Wealden Trio (1929, rev.1967) Christmas Song of the Women
3’
for unaccompanied SSA
Text by Ford Maddox Ford (1873-1939)
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 2
The earliest versions of this choral work were composed when Britten was
aged only 15, therefore pre-dating A Hymn to the Virgin. He uses an interesting
text for what is essentially a miniature scena in which three women bemoan (in
dialect – which the performance notes suggest should not be exaggerated!)
the fact that Christmas is hard when there is little food, there is no wood for the
fire and their husbands are good-for-nothings. They end by feeling aggrieved
that it is warm in heaven and cold on earth but note that Jesus was born in
equally poor conditions as the ones in which they live and so they can relate to
him and his parents on this level. Britten, young as he was, felt the instinctive
drama of this (as the incipient opera composer).
The carol can be sung by three solo voices, or three soloists with a chorus, or
the whole piece can be sung by a choir. The most dramatic option is the soloist
followed by a chorus which is surely the way Britten intended it. Soloists should
be placed a little apart from the chorus, if this option is taken, in order that
issues of balance don’t arise. This is especially true when, in the second half, a
soloist sings with the chorus.
The carol is essentially straightforward and ought not to present undue
problems to a choir used to singing rhythmically, dealing with duplets in a
compound time signature and which can field three confident soloists.
0-571-51860-5 Choral score (Part of Three Carols for Upper Voices)
14
CD track 32
Choir and Orchestra
Ballad of Heroes op. 14 (1939) for tenor (or soprano) solo, chorus and orchestra
18’
Difficulty level: 1 (for chorus)
This vivid overture was written for the opening of the Snape Maltings Concert
Hall in 1967. It was used again when the hall reopened in 1970 after the disastrous
fire of 1969 and 30 years later after major renovations. It is an ‘occasional’ piece
in the best sense of that term and must be one of the most frenetic overtures
in existence. The mood Britten creates is one of frantic creativity, of the hustle
and bustle of finishing off a building in time for its opening, of the excitement
of a purpose-built concert hall of sizeable proportions after so many years
of coping in the Aldeburgh Jubilee Hall and local churches, and of his own
personal triumph in seeing through such an ambitious project to its conclusion.
No wonder, then, that the strings hurtle away from the starting blocks like fired
up horses in the race of their lives and the winds cascade around like flights of
seabirds on the dancing wind. It is electrifying. The chorus (and/or organ and/
or brass) come in quietly with a stately chorale. The melody Britten uses is from
Valentin Schumann’s Geistliche Lieder of 1539, later set by Luther to the words
of the Lord’s Prayer and simply known as Vater Unser (Our Father) and used a
number of times by J.S. Bach.
Scoring: 3 (II=picc), 2, ca (=obIII), 2 , cl in Eb, 2, dbl bn (=bnIII); 4, 2, 3, 1;
timps, 2 perc (xyl, sd, td, bd, whip, cymb); harp, strings; OFFSTAGE: 3
trumpets in C; sd (optional instruments are ca, dbl bn, offstage tpts and
sd). Britten asks for the offstage instruments to be in a gallery or ‘isolated
position’, and later to be out of sight.
Text: W H Auden and Randall Swingler
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 3 (for chorus)
This highly dramatic and rarely performed work was written for a Festival of
Music for the People and first performed on 5 April 1939 at the Queen’s Hall,
London, conducted by Constant Lambert. It is another of Britten’s passionate
outbursts against the waste and horror of war which had already engulfed
Europe once earlier in the century and was about to do so for the second time.
The declaration of war was made on 3 September that year. His choice of texts
is highly significant. He had collaborated with Randall Swingler as recently as
the previous year on his short unaccompanied choral work Advance Democracy
– another politically motivated piece (see separate entry). Both Swingler and
Auden were aiming in their poems to goad the downtrodden Englishman into
standing up and fully living the life of freedom for which their forebears fought
and lost their lives. Swingler’s lines which say: ‘You who lean at the corner and
say “We have done our best”, ...To you we speak, you numberless Englishmen,
To remind you of the greatness still among you...Your life is yours, for which they
died.’ sum up the essence of the message of the piece.
The choral parts are straightforward and designed for simply effective
declamation. The overture is an ABA shape with the central section being a
quietly reflective respite from the excitement. The musical lines bear some
resemblance to the shape and feel of the chorale melody thereby binding the
music more grippingly together before the strings take off once again on their
galloping semiquavers. The choir comes in again for the final few pages of the
score and the whole edifice builds to a thrilling ending.
This is a great concert opener with or without a special occasion to justify it.
Short, sharp and effective it has the audience putting their seat belts on and
watching the road ahead with an intensity rare in music of this period. A great
piece for a Britten centenary concert.
The work is in three continuous movements. First comes a Funeral March (to
Swingler’s poem part-quoted above), then a manic Scherzo, a Dance of Death
to a rum-te-tum verse by Auden which only increases its sense of the macabre.
Finally comes a slow and powerful recitative and chorale and a slow Epilogue in
which the funeral march music from the opening returns.
CD track 1
Virtually the whole of the first section of the opening movement is in unison for
the chorus. The slow tread of the funeral march is given an added solemnity by
this unison singing. The first ten bars are recited on a low C, the next eight bars
an octave higher, and after this there is a mixture of simple harmony (more to
avoid high notes for low voices) and further unison singing for the rest of the
movement. The Scherzo is interesting in setting out the first three vocal parts
in a kind of fugal progress. The tenors have the first complete statement in
the home key (G minor), the altos are next in the dominant but by themselves,
the sopranos are next in line and back in the tonic – again by themselves, and
finally the basses have the subject but this time as the basis of a canon at the
unison between them and the altos (in a truncated version). The tenors, a
major third higher, are followed by the sopranos and then the voices gradually
come together to take the music to its first impassioned climax. Short, sharp,
quick-fire phrases interrupt the ongoing relentless orchestral progress often
referring back to that original musical idea. The music dies out at the end in an
exhausted hush.
0-571-50144-3 Chorus part
0-571-50151-6 Study score
There are seven movements in Pars I and six in Pars II. The tenor soloist is given
three florid recitatives, accompanied only by a piano, which act as bridges
between other orchestrally accompanied movements. Of these the most
noteworthy are the Arioso con canto popolare for soprano solo with tenors
and basses who hum a student song; another terrific Britten scherzo; and a
wonderfully raucous final pair of movements (Canon ed ostinato and Corale
con canto) where Britten seems to be aping the Vivat Regina! cries in Parry’s
I was glad or encouraging the kind of noisy ‘I’m from the best university’ kind
of student touchline shout. This has outrageously high notes for the tenors
(top B) which further endorse this feeling. There are real echoes of the
Spring Symphony (see separate entry) final movement here which are further
underlined by the last section of the Cantata which brings in the bells, piano,
huge percussion and the inevitable chorale in which the choir sings ‘that a free
academy may thrive in a free community, for ever the ornament and treasure
of illustrious Basle’.
979-0-060-01393-5 Vocal/piano score
979-0-060-09085-1 Study score
CD track 24
Scoring: 2 (II=picc), 2, 2, 2; 4, 2, 3, 1; timps; 4 perc (trng, tamburo militaire,
tamb, cymb, Chinese block, bd, t-t, xyl, glock, bells in C); 2 harps (II ad lib);
pf (cel ad lib); strings
Text: in Latin compiled from the charter of the University, and from older
orations in praise of Basle by Bernhard Wyss.
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Britten’s genius lifts this work above being just a worthy celebration of the
500th anniversary of the foundation of Basle University. It is tongue-in-cheek
and mockingly non-academic while referring all the time to academic musical
forms and formulae. It is written in two parts (everything is in the statutory Latin
including the titles of the parts – Pars I and Pars II). The titles of the movements
show Britten’s intention to show off a wide variety of techniques. Here are
some examples: Chorale/Alla Rovescio (the theme is given and responded to
with the same melody upside down)/Recitativo/Tema seriale con fuga/Canone
ed ostinato. There is a good deal of humour here.
The Ballad of Heroes is straightforward for a choir to perform. The complexity,
such as it is, is all in the orchestra. Britten’s instructions as to the possibility
of omitting several instruments from the performance make it even more
practical (and less expensive). This really is a work to explore and consider
programming - it is a sure-fire audience winner.
Overture with or without chorus
for SATB soloists, chorus and orchestra
Difficulty level: 4 (for chorus)
The third movement introduces the tenor (or soprano) soloist in a highly
lyrical accompanied recitative. The choir responds with a simply harmonised
chorale which acts as a backdrop to the soloist’s continuing line. This section
is unaccompanied and, though simple for the choir, provides the greatest
challenge of the work in keeping the pitch up. There are eighteen bars of slow
sustained singing here after which a horn delivers the verdict on the success or
failure of the choir to keep in tune. After this the chorale material is maintained
but with full orchestra support until the Epilogue when material from the
opening returns and the choir sings those repeated unison Cs to take the work
to its quietly effective ending.
The Building of the House op. 79 (1967) Cantata academica, carmen basiliense, op. 62 (1959) 21’
6’
This may not be Britten at his most soul-searching but, as always, there is
plenty here to enjoy, especially if the work is not taken too seriously. It is a
celebratory, occasional piece and it could be well taken up by other academic
establishments celebrating big anniversaries. The chorus parts are not very
difficult, though they do present challenges for the choir – not least in having
tenors capable of those very high notes at the end. The Tema seriale con fuga is
sinewy and needs careful tuning. It also has the subject regularly given upside
Scoring: 2,2,2,2; 2,2,0,1; timps; 1 perc (bells, trgl, cymb, sd, xyl); strings
The chorus can be replaced or added to by an organ (chamber or grand) or
by extra brass (3rd trumpet and 3trombones)
Text: Psalm 127 (in English) adapted by Imogen Holst from The Whole Book
of Psalms
Publisher: Faber Music
15
down after its initial sounding by the basses. All good fun.
The work is divided into three parts: Before the Creation, Angels in Scripture, and
Angels in Common Life and at our Death. Michael was, of course, an archangel and
his feast day marks the celebration of all angels. The theme of angels is therefore
an obvious one. The musical movements are separated by spoken texts taken
from many sources. It is ideal to have two voices, a male and a female, to bring
additional vocal colour to a performance. As with The World of the Spirit it is
perfectly possible to cut sections of text if they are felt to be too long.
CD track 22
979-0-060-01402-4 Vocal/piano score
979-0-060-01401-7 Study score
Cantata misericordium, op. 69 (1963) for tenor and baritone solos, small chorus and string
quartet, string orchestra, piano, harp and timpani.
20’
The work opens with Britten’s representation of chaos. This is done effectively
by other worldly timpani rolls, 32’ pitch notes on the organ and quiet unison
lines from the strings. Sudden outbursts of forte from the organ feel like
falling fiery meteorites lightening up the gloom. The first speaker joins the
end of this movement and then both give the first set of readings. The short
first part is concluded by a big choral movement. Part II begins with a series
of short readings interspersed by brief choral references to Jacob, Elisha and
Mary who have featured in the readings. The fourth movement which follows
is another choral movement this time including the soloists. It is based on
the plainsong ‘Christe, sanctorum decus Angelorum’. The fifth movement is
an extraordinary coup de théâtre, setting the famous passage in the Book of
Revelation about war in heaven. This is St. Michael’s battle with the dragon,
Lucifer, and his victory resulting in Lucifer’s expulsion from Heaven. Britten’s
brilliant imagination has the tenors and basses speaking their part but at given
approximate pitches. He also asks that as the dynamic rises, so does the pitch.
The effect is animal and dramatic. This movement concludes Part II.
Text: In Latin by Patrick Wilkinson
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 4 (chorus parts)
This work is a different as chalk from cheese from the Cantata academica. Here
is a searingly beautiful work which presses all Britten’s sympathetic buttons. It
was composed for the centenary of the Red Cross and first performed in Geneva
on 1 September 1963 conducted by Ernest Ansermet. Britten worked with his
librettist, Patrick Wilkinson, to create a dramatic scena around the parable of
the Good Samaritan. How appropriate this was for the organisation whose
work it was intended to celebrate. Wilkinson set it in Latin, giving the Cantata a
timeless sense of the universality of the message the parable conveys.
Britten’s scoring further emphasises the intimacy of the work which has echoes
of Saint Nicolas and the Ceremony of Carols in its use of the harp and piano.
The separate string quartet, however, is the truly personal touch giving that
powerful sense of looking in on a private conversation. The quartet begins the
work with a contrapuntal figure which returns at key moments as a refrain or
as a joining passage marking the arrival of a new potential source of help to the
wounded man, and again at the end. This is a work which barely raises its voice.
The emphasis is on compassion and not on the violence done to the traveller
who was so badly injured and so callously ignored by the priest and the Levite
who passed by. This Cantata immediately followed the composition of the War
Requiem, and Owen’s pity and waste of war is at the heart of this new work
which could have painted a very different picture of righteous indignation or
the fighting which would leave the traveller broken by the wayside. The end of
the work also has strong resonance with the War Requiem when the Samaritan
has taken the traveller to recover in a local inn and says: ‘sleep now, my friend,
sleep: forget your injuries.’ Britten has achieved a remarkable effect in this work.
It leaves an indelible impression on its listeners and, like all stories designed to
demonstrate a moral, sends one away intent on being a better person.
Part III has some very compelling readings which are responded to by further
fascinating choral settings. Movement seven, in particular, a tenor solo aria,
conjures an extraordinary sound world. The text begins ‘A thousand thousand
gleaming fires Seem’d kindling in the air... Methought the very breath I
breath’d Was full of sparks divine...’ It gives clear hints of future operatic
music and seems somehow to sound like fireflies in the way Britten uses his
strings, both with mutes and a mixture of bowed and plucked instruments, and
works his textures. The soloist is given staccato phrases to sing in among more
lyrical parts. The whole thing is mesmerising in its effect. The ninth movement,
‘Whoso dwelleth under the defence of the most High’, a setting of Psalm 91 in
the Myles Coverdale translation, is the only unaccompanied setting in the work
and it is also available separately (see separate entry). Britten uses another
chant as its basis – that of the fifth psalm tone. The final movement is a choral
setting of the well-known hymn ‘Ye watchers and ye holy ones’ to the tune
Hyfrydol. Reaching a powerful climax with a final ‘Amen’ the music winds down
with the choir singing repeated ‘Amens’ and the soloists singing ‘Heaven is
here, and all the angels of Heav’n’.
The choral parts of the Cantata misericordium are quite challenging, though
not in the league of Sacred and Profane or A Boy was Born. What is essential in
performing this work, however, is that the choral parts should be so well sung
that the gentle nature of the work is not disturbed by obviously problematic
passages for choir. The whole concentration should be on the message, as
Britten intended. It is the moral of the tale and not its means of communication
which is paramount. The choir is given the same material as the string quartet
at certain points and needs to both balance with those solo players and enrich
their textures. It is an interesting challenge which perhaps should be mainly
reserved for small expert chamber choirs who can really get under the skin of
Britten’s intentions.
While the format of this work is similar to The World of the Spirit its musical
language is very different. In many ways this piece is more forward looking
than its successor but in other ways the next work is more satisfying and more
memorable – to this listener at least – in a concert performance. Whatever
individual people’s reactions are to these two scores there is no doubt that
they represent a completely different aspect of Britten’s creativity from the
many familiar pieces which are regularly performed. Both these works make
powerful statements and are emotionally intense. They need good, experienced,
intelligent, thoughtful, and vocally interesting readers to do justice to what is a
hugely important element in their performance. The Company of Heaven is less
expensive to perform than The World of the Spirit but it is of course likely that the
orchestration of the rest of the programme will dictate which piece is preferred.
979-0-060-01405-5 Vocal/piano score
979-0-060-01406-2 Choral score
979-0-060-01404-8 Study score
0-571-51090-6 Choral score
0-571-51188-0 Full score
Children’s Crusade
Inkslinger’s Love Song A Ballad for Children’s voices and orchestra
for tenor solo, chorus and orchestra
see Children’s and Upper Voices
CD track 6
see Choral Music from the Operas
The Company of Heaven (1937) 45’
God Save the Queen (1961) Cantata for speaker(s), soprano and tenor soloists, chorus,
timpani, organ and strings
for SSAATTBB and orchestra
3’
Scoring: 2,2,2,2; 4,2,3,1; timps; 2 perc (cymb, sd, bd), strings
Britten also made a reduced orchestration in 1967:
2,2,2,2; 2,2,0,1(ad lib); timps; 2 perc (cymb, sd, bd) strings
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Text compiled by R. Ellis Roberts
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 2-3 (chorus)
Difficulty level: 1-2
Britten wrote this work as a radio feature for the BBC marking Michaelmas
Day – St Michael and all Angels – on 29 September. One of two such works he
composed close together, this was written in 1937 and The World of the Spirit
(see separate entry) the following year. He collaborated with the writer Richard
Ellis Roberts on both projects. Britten was only 23 when he wrote this work but
his reputation had already reached the point where he was recognised as one
of the most formidable talents of his generation. When one considers that his
set of virtuoso choral variations A Boy was Born was already four years old and
his Frank Bridge variations had just been completed it is hardly surprising that
the BBC would seek to commission him.
This unusual arrangement of the British National Anthem was written for the
Leeds Festival and sets two verses. The first is miraculously piano and the
hushed awe engendered is extraordinary. How did he come up with something
so simple and so original? This verse is in Eb major. Four bars later and a molto
crescendo past we are in a flag waving Bb major and singing for all we are worth.
The final phrase is repeated twice to round the whole thing off. It is a prime
example of the simplest things so often being the most effective, as heard
when this version has been programmed at The Last Night of the Proms.
979-0-060-01472-7 Vocal/piano score
16
Lullaby of Dream Shadows St. Nicolas is famous for many legendary miracles and for being the original
‘Santa Claus’. Crozier’s libretto is designed to tell the story of his life, to recount
some of his most celebrated acts and to give the audience/congregation the
opportunity of joining in two beautiful hymns at key moments: ‘All people
that on earth do dwell’ and ‘God moves in a mysterious way his wonders to
perform’. The narration is all done by the choir, though the tenor sings firstperson narratives as well in his role as the mature Nicolas. The young Nicolas
is sung by a boy in movement II. There is a dramatic moment at the end of this
movement when the boy’s voice does a tumble and the tenor proclaims in the
voice of Nicolas as a young man: ‘God be glorified’.
for chorus and orchestra
CD track 5
see Choral Music from the Operas
Praise We Great Men 8’
for SATB solos, chorus and orchestra
Orchestrated and completed by Colin Matthews (1976)
(3 fl II&III =picc, 2 ob I=ca, 2 cl II=bass, 2 bn/4 hn, 2 tpt, 2 or 1 trb/timps/
2 perc (bd, cym, vib, glock)/piano/harp/strings
Text: Edith Sitwell
Publisher: Faber Music
The third movement is an accompanied recitative in which the soloist sings of
Nicolas devoting himself to God through the agonies and torment of the many
distractions and temptations of life. His faith wins through and he sings a final
touching phrase: ‘and Love was satisfied’. The sea whips up a storm in the next
movement: ‘He journeys to Palestine’. It threatens to overturn the ship and
drown everyone on board. There is wailing from the sopranos and altos of the
semi-chorus and agonised calls from the tenors and basses to ‘man the pumps’.
Finally, Nicolas begs God to let the storm cease and offers thanks for their safe
delivery. Britten creates a palpable sense of relief in the final pages.
Difficulty level: 2 (chorus)
Edith Sitwell had composed her poem ‘Praise We Great Men’ for Britten, who
wanted to set it for Mstislav Rostropovich to perform in his first season as
conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington. Britten got
about half way through but he became so ill that he could not complete it.
He therefore talked to the composer Colin Matthews, who had recently
collaborated with him on completing the Welcome Ode (see separate entry),
and agreed that Matthews should orchestrate the work. Matthews added a
coda as a ‘completion’ which was simply a repeat of an earlier section of the
work.
In the fifth movement, ‘Nicolas comes to Myra and is chosen Bishop’, the
choir sings chorale-like phrases welcoming him as their new Bishop. They go
through his ceremonial dressing with all the accoutrements of his office, the
mitre, crozier (nice pun on the librettist’s name), robe and ring. An energetic
chorus ‘Serve the faith and spurn his enemies’ leads to the first great hymn – a
wonderfully climactic moment. Britten’s arrangement is suitably uplifting.
The work opens with a dramatic gesture from the choir with no orchestral
preamble. A great cry of ‘Praise we great men’ sweeps up and down with
equally dramatic dynamic shifts from forte to pianissimo or, a little later, from a
fp to pp. Matthews’ orchestration is instinctively colourful and shows his deep
empathy with Britten’s soundworld. Sitwell composed her poem in stanzas of
unequal length. According to Matthews, Britten originally marked the poem
up in eleven sections which he changed to ten when he united the first two.
This division into short ‘movements’ gave him plenty of opportunities for
new colour and variety of forces. Thus the first section is scene-setting and
triumphant. The second uses the four soloists which Britten told Matthews
he envisaged as ‘leading singers of a professional choir rather than as fully
fledged ‘soloists’. He was therefore thinking of them chorally and as a consort
of blended and balanced voices. The full chorus joins, and the first word of the
next section ends the previous one. A compound time signature heralds a new
mood and altos and basses sing quietly and ‘marked’ in praise of ‘Those who
can raise Gold spirits of men from their rough Ape-dust’. There is much pairing
of parts in this section between altos and basses and sopranos and tenors. At
figure 4 there is an extended tenor solo which is the music Matthews took for
his coda which follows to end the fragment.
But things did not go on smoothly and during the reign of Diocletian and the
persecution of martyrs (303-311) Nicolas was imprisoned for eight years before
he could resume his pastoral mission among the poor and disadvantaged. The
sixth movement is an impassioned picture of those barren years and Nicolas’
frustration at the interruption of his work. In the next movement, probably
the best-known section of the work, Nicolas performs the miracle of the three
pickled boys lost to their families, ‘slaughtered by the butcher’s knife’. At the
end of this movement three boys enter from the other end of the church
singing ‘Alleluia’. It is a very moving moment. Continuing this theme, the eighth
movement ‘His piety and marvellous works’ is a list of miracles he performed
followed by a beautifully simple falling phrase which is sung like a round ‘Let
the legends that we tell, Praise him with our prayers as well’. Typical Britten,
tuneful, memorable and supremely effective. The final movement tells of
Nicolas’ death and the work ends with the other great hymn: ‘God moves in
a mysterious way’.
There are divided opinions about this work. Some feel it to be sentimental, while
others, like me, feel that it is a genuine and heartfelt response to a text which
is aimed at connecting with young people. Typical of Britten is the eminently
practical nature of the work. Its orchestration is minimal and the string parts are
written to be played by amateurs led, as Britten notes, preferably by a quintet of
professionals. He also notes that the piano duet part is not difficult and can also
be played by less experienced players. Only the first percussion part should be
taken by a professional. He should also play as many of the other instruments
as he can. The other parts can be played ad libitum by one or more ‘enthusiastic
amateurs’. This is Britten the social musician, the encourager and provider of
good new music for the young of all abilities. If some of the music is therefore
not what the classical music establishment thought the composer should be
spending his time on, we should focus instead on how young performer’s faces
light up as they get stuck into the task in hand and involved with the story. It
has all the right elements for our ‘Harry Potter’ age: magic (lots of miracles),
drama (storm at sea), imprisonment (will he, won’t he get out?), and even a
wand – of sorts – in his crozier!
Though this is a truncated work, the slow coda, only fourteen bars long, is long
enough to impart a satisfyingly rounded-off feeling. What is missing is obviously
tantalising but what a shame it would have been not to have these almost
final thoughts from one of the century’s greatest musical geniuses. This is an
occasional piece; a celebratory ‘ode’ which can be used on many and varied
occasions. The chorus parts are very straightforward. Conductors are urged to
look at this as yet another example of the rare Britten which complements the
popular and familiar output of this extraordinary composer.
0-571-53032-X Vocal score
0-571-53031-1 Full score
Rejoice in the Lamb
for SATB and orchestra (wind quintet, percussion, organ (ad
lib) and strings)
Saint Nicolas is a great audience piece. It forms a meaty work for a half
of a concert programme and it involves everybody. It can be produced
inexpensively if the minimum of professionals are used: tenor solo, string
quintet and percussionist. Even if all the orchestral forces are professional it
will not break the bank – a serious consideration in these straitened times. Its
greatest challenge is managing the forces and the distances. Britten suggests
that the gallery choir (sopranos and altos) has its own conductor which helps.
The work can also be sung by almost any fair-sized choir, and can be very
effective with a large group.
CD track 17
see Mixed Voices with keyboard
Saint Nicolas op. 42 (1947-48) 50’
Cantata for tenor solo, chorus (SATB), semi-chorus (SA),
four solo boys, string orchestra, piano duet, percussion and
organ
This work demonstrates to me Britten’s generosity of spirit and his natural
feeling for enriching the repertoire at all levels of attainment. What a gift!
Scoring: Piano duet; organ; strings; percussion (Timpani/side drum, bass
drum, tenor drum, cymbal, triangle, gong, whip, tambourine)
Text: Eric Crozier
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
979-0-060-01514-4 Full score
979-0-060-01516-8 Vocal score
979-0-060-01517-5 Choral score
979-0-2025-2171-7 Choral score (German edition)
979-0-060-01515-1 Study score
Difficulty level: 3
Saint Nicolas (note the name has no ‘H’ in it!) was written for the centenary of
Lancing College in Sussex, the independent secondary boarding school on the
south coast of England which Peter Pears had attended in his teens. It has a vast
chapel intended by its founder, Revd Nathaniel Woodard, as the cathedral for all
the schools of his extensive foundation known collectively as ‘Woodard’ schools.
17
CD track 36
Spring Symphony op. 44 (1948-49) 45’
and orchestras should be encouraged to promote it widely. It is one of the most
original choral/orchestral works of the first half of the twentieth century.
for soprano, alto and tenor soli, mixed chorus, boys’ choir
and orchestra
979-0-060-01534-2 Vocal/piano score
979-0-060-01533-5 Study score
Texts:
Part One
Introduction:
Anon. 16th century
The merry cuckoo
Edmund Spenser
Spring
Thomas Nashe
The driving boy
George Peel and John Clare
The morning star
John Milton
Part Two
Welcome maids of honour
Robert Herrick
Waters above
Henry Vaughan
Out on the lawn I lie in bed
W H Auden
Part Three
When will my may come
Richard Barnefield
Fair and fair
George Peel
Sound the flute
William Blake
Part Four (Finale)
London, to thee I do present
Beaumont and Fletcher
the merry month of May
Sumer is icumen in
Anon
Scoring: 3 fl (III=picc and alto fl), 2 ob, ca, 2 cl in B fl, bass cl, 2 bn, dbn; 4 hn,
3 tpt in C, 3 trb, tuba, cow horn; timps, 4 perc (sd, td, tamb, cymb, bd, gong,
bells in A, Bfl, wb, xyl, castanets, vibr); 2 harps; strings
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Te Deum in C
for SATB, treble or soprano solo and orchestra (harp or
piano and strings)
see Mixed Voices with keyboard
Two Psalms (1931) for SATB choir
Psalm 130 (12’)
19’
Scoring:
2,2(2=CA),1,bass cl,2; 4,2,3(3=bass),1; timps, strings
Psalm 150 (7’)
Scoring: 2(2=picc),2,2,2; 4,2,3(3=bass),1; timps; 1 perc (cymbs, sd, tamburo
militaire); strings
Publisher: Chester
Difficulty level: 3
Difficulty level: 5
These two psalm settings were written in 1932 when Britten was a student
at the Royal College of Music as part of his submission for a Mendelssohn
scholarship for which he also wrote the Phantasy Quintet in F minor. The
scholarship application was not successful but the committee awarded Britten
£50 in order that he should not feel discouraged! These psalm settings are the
only examples of large-scale choral/orchestral music we have from Britten
at this stage of his career and are therefore very valuable as markers and as
pointers to his later development. Ireland (his nominal teacher), Howells and
Vaughan Williams were all encouraging to him after reading the scores, and
Vaughan Williams tried hard to get them a performance – something which
never happened.
The Spring Symphony was commissioned by the Koussevitzky Music Foundation
and is dedicated to Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra. It
was actually premiered at the Concertgebouw, Amsterdam in July 1949 before
its American premiere the following month at Tanglewood by its dedicatees.
This work is a major undertaking from all points of view. It uses a huge orchestra
(complete with cow horn which has to be hired specially), a children’s choir
which certainly does not have to be composed only of boys, three soloists, and
a large SATB chorus which is given very challenging and detailed music to sing. If
any work demonstrates the flip side of the Britten coin from Saint Nicolas it must
be the Spring Symphony. Here is a seriously intentioned, highly contemporary
work for its time which nevertheless shows his predilection for anthologising
texts, for creating amazing moments of levity – approaching the humorous
episodes in his operas – and producing a score of such colour and vibrancy
that the impression left on the mind is indelible. Despite being composed for
an American ensemble and conductor this work is quintessentially British. The
poems have strong connections with English pastoral imagery and some are
forever associated with settings as madrigals. In fact this madrigalian emphasis
bubbles gently beneath the surface for much of the work and points up where
Britten’s roots really lie.
The words of Psalm 130 form that emotive cry for help: ‘Out of the deep have
I called unto Thee, O Lord. Lord hear my voice.’ The basic motif for the work
is the slowly unwinding and muted compound time quaver (8th note) figure
which the strings play at the start. The tempo marking is Poco lento ma comodo
and it shows Britten’s keenness to ensure just the right kind of tempo for the
music. Attention to detail is evident everywhere, a hallmark of his style even at
this stage. The vocal parts are not very demanding and there is much pairing of
S/T and A/B. The orchestral scoring is also commendably spare allowing the big
moments to really stand out when they arrive. This setting has a real sweep and
emotional depth to it and it is curious that no performance was ever achieved.
The work is divided into four parts – loosely the four movements of a
symphony. The second part is nominally the ‘slow’ movement and the third
might be thought of as the ‘scherzo’ but this shoehorning of his original
structure into the standard formats is not entirely helpful. Britten actually
sets each poem as a separate entity within each movement and simply moves
on attacca into the next section. Thus the first part consists of five different
sections each using varied forces and contributing to the colour and variety of
the larger movement. The Introduction uses the full choir, The Merry Cuckoo
is a tenor solo accompanied by three trumpets, Spring, the sweet spring uses
all three soloists with choir, The Driving Boy is a tour-de-force for soprano and
childrens’ choir (who also have to whistle!), The Morning Star is given to the
chorus to end the first part, and so the work continues. The Finale is a genuine
set piece and is the one movement which is composed to a single extended
poem by Beaumont and Fletcher. Full of humour and high spirits – the entry
of the cowhorn always raises a smile – it makes a wonderfully upbeat ending
to this earthy work. The children’s choir is given a starring role throughout this
amazing movement, but nowhere more so than at Britten’s inspired coup de
théâtre where he brings in the well-known Sumer is icumen in at the end which
crowns the sweeping choral phrases. And all this is in the brightest of keys – C
major. The ending, as dramatic as everything which has preceded it fades away
as the tenor soloist sings ‘...and so, my friends, I cease’ followed by a huge and
final C major chord.
The paean of praise which forms the text of Psalm 150 is well-known and is a gift
for the composer who can reflect all the different instruments detailed in the
text and build up a terrific head of steam. Britten actually set this Psalm again
much later in his career in 1962 (see separate entry) but the two settings are
fundamentally different. Here, in a 6/8 time signature, the strings play a busy
semiquaver (16th note) figure which is interrupted by more static wind chords,
before the strings take off again. I wonder if it is possible that this opening was
in Britten’s mind when he came to make his setting of the Jubilate Deo in C (see
separate entry). It isn’t that the music is the same, but the lively instrumental
opening seems to come from a similar mindset. The choir’s entry is in unison
and has both the static wind chords and the busy string writing around it.
Then things get going and all sorts of colours and descriptive elements are
introduced including a particularly effective pizzicato for the ‘lute and harp’.
The work ends with an exciting flourish.
In these two wonderfully contrasted settings Britten shows us his aptitude
for choral writing, his feel for the balance between choir and orchestra, and
his imagination in writing some beautifully descriptive music. We need to hear
these early works which give us such insights into the development of Britten’s
musical personality. Richly rewarding discoveries.
This is a challenging work on all fronts and is an extremely complex composition.
It is however eminently performable by a choir of sufficient size to balance the
large orchestra and who can rise to the level of attainment Britten requires. It
also really does need a childrens’ choir – and a children’s choir which can sing
with real confidence and projection. They are given a key role to play in this
work. In fact the ‘spring’ element so vital to the whole concept is underscored
by young singers in the ‘springtime’ of their lives. This, therefore, has to have a
completely different kind of tone quality from the main choir – a second group
of sopranos won’t do. Beyond these practical caveats this is a score which
deserves to be better-known and more often performed than it is, and choirs
18
CD track 20
War Requiem op. 66 (1961-62) for soprano, tenor and baritone solos, chorus, orchestra,
chamber orchestra, boys’ choir and organ
85’
of warning right at the opening of the work and appears throughout. The point
of the tritone, however, is its dual capacity as a discord in its melodic guise,
and its harmonic role as part of a chord leading to resolution (it forms part of a
dominant 7th chord, for instance). This in itself mirrors the themes of conflict
and reconciliation which underpin the whole work. From a practical point of
view, however, there can be serious tuning issues relating to this interval and
this is just one of the many performance challenges which face the intrepid
conductor taking on the work. The boys’ choir is placed at a distance and has
a chamber organ or harmonium to accompany the voices. This choir still has
to be co-ordinated with the main orchestra and will either need to be in the
sightline of the principal conductor or given its own conductor.
Scoring: 3 (3=picc), 2, ca, 3 (III=cl in Eb and bass cl), 2, dbl bn; 6, 4, 3, 1; timps,
4 perc (2 sd, td, bd, tamb, trgl, cymb, castanets, whip, Chinese blocks, gong,
bells in C and F#, vibr, antique cymbals in C and F#); piano, grand org (ad lib);
strings.
Chamber orch: fl (=picc), ob (=ca), cl, bn; hn; perc (timp, sd, bd, cymb,
gong); harp, string quintet (2 vl, vla, vc, db)
Chamber organ (or harmonium) to accompany boys’ choir
Text: Missa pro defunctis and Wilfred Owen
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Layout is a major issue for performers of the War Requiem. Because of the way
in which the chamber orchestra and the full orchestra segue in and out of each
other’s sections it is much better, in practical terms, for the two groups to be
placed together directly under the baton of the main conductor. It is the boys’
choir and its organist who need a satellite conductor especially if they are ‘at a
distance’ as Britten directs.
Difficulty level: 5
In many ways this magnum opus, one of the 20th century’s defining works,
was also Britten’s defining moment. Everything he believed in and stood
for was writ large in this most fortuitous commission. Coventry had been
almost obliterated by German bombs on 14 November 1940. The cathedral
was destroyed although its fine tower and spire were miraculously saved.
The inspirational decision was taken to build a new cathedral at right angles
to the old and to connect them. The new building’s message was to be of
reconciliation. A sacred ministry for reconciliation with international outreach
was put in place and still partly defines the cathedral’s mission.
The next major issue is that of balance. Such a large orchestra will threaten even
a big chorus at times and there is a fine line to be drawn between audibility and
a possible reduction in drama, such as those moments of obliteration where it
is the effect which matters. Such points occur in the Dies Irae and the Hosanna
of the Sanctus and Benedictus amongst others. But much more seriously, the
chamber orchestra is given such a characterful part to play that the conductor
needs to be very careful that the soloists are not drowned. The most important
issue is the audibility of the words. While the words of the Latin Mass are, on the
whole, very well known, Owen’s poetry is not. The power of the presentation
of this work is in the delivery of the message. If that message is weakened by
carelessness with balance, or excessive loss of clarity due to an over-resonant
acoustic, the performance will not achieve its full purpose however brilliant the
playing and singing may be in itself.
For a long time Britten had felt that the gap in his output was a major choral/
orchestral work. He tried twice to encourage writers to give him a libretto
which would fire his imagination. W. H. Auden and Ronald Duncan were both
asked but although they tried neither could supply what he wanted. When
Coventry mounted an Arts Festival to celebrate the dedication of its new
cathedral in 1962 Britten was an obvious choice to ask for a major work. This,
for Britten, was the opportunity for which he had been waiting. As a lifelong,
passionate pacifist it was his opportunity to write a work which reminded its
audience of the reason for the building of this new cathedral, but also, and
far more importantly, to demonstrate in the most powerful way possible the
horror, devastation, futility and utter waste of war.
After the War Requiem’s early success the critical tide in some quarters turned
against the piece. This was a time when the music press was increasingly
focusing on the European experimental avant-garde, and composers who
extended tonal traditions, such as Britten and Shostakovich, were becoming
difficult to place in terms of perceived ‘relevancy’. Of course, performers and
audiences remained true to the work and commentators have progressively
restored the War Requiem to its central place in the musical canon. With the
passing of half a century the critical concern – obsession – with fashion, style
and language has faded into insignificance and one is left with the purity of a
magisterial work of genius and a message which is as powerful in today’s world
of conflicts as it was in 1962.
His inspired idea was to mix the words of the Missa pro defunctis (Mass for
the Dead) in Latin with the poems of one of the greatest of the First World
War poets, Wilfred Owen. Owen was killed within days of the ending of those
hostilities and this further emphasised Britten’s central theme of the criminal
waste of human life in futile conflict. He uses nine of Owen’s poems which
form a kind of song cycle which weaves in and out of the formal sections of
the Latin Mass. Owen’s own statement: ‘My subject is War, and the pity of War.
The poetry is in the pity...All a poet can do today is warn. That is why the true
poets must be truthful.’ chimed perfectly with Britten’s own convictions and
led to the writing of one of the most moving and personal works of modern
times. The setting of the Latin Mass and the interspersing of solo song was
a brilliant binding of public and private personas which hits the listener with
extraordinary intensity.
Listeners and writers may argue about which of Britten’s many great works
represent the pinnacle of his achievement. Some will say Peter Grimes, others
may point to Billy Budd or his third string quartet – or whichever work speaks
most powerfully to that individual. I would say, however, that between the
schoolboy A Hymn to the Virgin and the mature War Requiem we have two
starkly powerful works representing two absolute extremes of scale but which
demonstrate with vivid clarity the all-embracing nature of Britten’s genius.
So powerful was the first performance that The Times critic, William Mann,
wrote: ‘so superbly proportioned and calculated, so humiliating and disturbing
in effect, in fact so tremendous, that every performance it is given ought to be
a momentous occasion’. It was a score which immediately captured the public
imagination. Among 20th century British large-scale choral works only Walton’s
Belshazzar’s Feast had previously caused the kind of stir which the War Requiem
created. Walton’s theatrical histrionics and hire-wire excitement couldn’t fail to
raise the gooseflesh. Here now, however, was a deeply spiritual work on the
most serious subject which caught the national mood perfectly. When Britten’s
recording was released the following year it sold 200,000 copies within the
first five months which was almost unheard of for a classical work, and possibly
unique for a large-scale contemporary one. This was the moment of destiny for
which Britten had been preparing all his adult life. The peace movements of
the 1960s, the Cuban missile crisis, nuclear testing, anti-nuclear protests, the
war-weariness of the seemingly endless conflict in Vietnam, all these things
contributed to the public’s readiness to hear this message which Britten
so powerfully addressed. The fact that the original soloists were supposed
to be from Germany, Britain and Russia further emphasised the message of
reconciliation. The sad fact of Galina Vishnevskaya, the Russian soprano, being
prevented from singing because she was refused permission by the Russian
Minister of Culture, spoiled what would have been a truly historic cast of singers
(the others were Peter Pears and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau). But Vishnevskaya
did come to record the work in 1963 with Britten conducting. Her place at the
premiere was memorably taken by Heather Harper.
979-0-060-01556-4 Vocal/piano score
979-0-060-01557-1 Choral score
979-0-060-01558-8 Choral score - boys’ choir
979-0-060-10707-8 Study score
Separate editions:
Agnus Dei 979-0-060-08608-3 Choral score
Welcome Ode op. 95 (1976) for young people’s chorus (SAB with optional T) and
orchestra
8’
Scoring: 2 fl, 2 ob, 2 cl, 2 bn/4 hn, 2 tpt, 3 trb, tuba/timp = sd/3 perc (bd, sd,
cymb, trgl, tamb, xyl)/piano/strings
Texts:
1. March Thomas Dekker and John Ford
2. Jig (orch)
3. Roundel anon. 1600
4. Modulation (orch)
5. Canon Henry Fielding
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 2-3
The performance issues of the War Requiem are many and varied. Its forces
are huge requiring a very large orchestra, a smaller chamber orchestra which
accompanies the soloists, two organs, three soloists, main chorus and boys’
choir. There are also ideally two conductors. In the premiere performance
Meredith Davies conducted the main orchestra and choir while Britten himself
conducted the chamber orchestra. Another issue is the building of the whole
work on the interval of the tritone or augmented 4th (C – F#) – an interval
which, for centuries, has been known as the ‘devil’s’ interval. It sounds the note
This irresistible work was written for the Queen’s Silver Jubilee visit to Ipswich
on 11 July 1977, though Britten was to die before the premiere. Colin Matthews
orchestrated it under Britten’s supervision. The work comes from the same
essential stable as the Spring Symphony and the opera Gloriana (see the entry in
this guide to the Choral Dances from Gloriana) but, written for a young people’s
chorus, is kept simple, direct and engaging. Britten’s sense of practicality led him
to write the chorus parts for sopranos, altos and basses only. There is a short
19
optional section for tenors in the first movement March. Tenors, of course, can
easily sing along with the basses and have no reason to be excluded from the
choir. Real tenors, as all choral people know, are, like Rachmaninov’s Russian
low basses, ‘as rare as asparagus at Christmas’, and Britten knew perfectly well
that young mens’ voices do not settle into a tenor or bass range properly for
some years into adulthood.
Part III begins with a beautiful soprano aria (O knowing, glorious Spirit!)
accompanied by harp and violin and flute solos. This movement is a real Britten
soundscape especially in its ending. This is followed by a setting of Gerard
Manley Hopkins’ God’s Grandeur (The world is charged with the grandeur of God).
Britten was to base his unaccompanied setting of these words for his choral
cycle A.M.D.G. (see separate entry) on the music from this movement. A.M.D.G.
was written the year after The World of the Spirit and so this music was still
very much in his mind as he wrote the second version. The movements share
a terrific energy and almost relentless progress throughout. They also share
melodic elements, especially the little chromatic rising figure which initially
appears at the end of the very first vocal phrase. The quick repetitions of ‘have
trod’ are replicated almost exactly, and the treatment of the gentle phrase
‘Because the Holy Ghost over the bent world broods’ is almost identically set
in the later composition. It is fascinating to see how Britten wanted to develop
his setting in this work into a larger-scale unaccompanied setting so soon
afterwards.
The March is brisk, forthright and upbeat. The text is a royal welcome bringing
in the whole population of the countryside, animals and all. The orchestral Jig
which follows starts with a fiddle solo – very much a recreation of a country
fiddler playing solo for people to dance to. The movement swirls around as the
lads twirl their girls in a breathless dance. It is simple and yet also incredibly
effective writing. The Roundel brings back the chorus in a sort-of round which
starts with the sopranos and moves to the altos and then basses. A Modulation
movement for orchestra links this movement with the final Canon in which the
theme is given in unison by the choir first and then broken down into its proper
separated entries. The ending has three sharply punctuated and short final
chords.
The epilogue to the score, though not quite the final music, is a fully worked
out arrangement of the plainsong melody heard at the beginning. This shows
Britten’s enjoyment of hymn singing which was to be such an important part
of compositions like Saint Nicolas and Noye’s Fludde. The work ends in a quietly
contemplative coda with a gentle choral ‘Amen’.
This is another work which is an ‘occasional’ piece but as a taster of what
Britten has to offer young singers it is a gift. It can be programmed in a number
of ways and would work well as an ‘overture’, or might be used as a celebratory
piece for the opening of a new hall, or the welcoming of a dignitary – or simply
because it is a good piece!
The World of the Spirit is a fascinating and absorbing score. It is completely
outside the normal Britten oeuvre and is yet another example of a rarity which
should be taken up and widely used. Audiences will love this music, and if the
spoken parts are felt to be too lengthy some judicious pruning can easily and
effectively be undertaken. Donald Mitchell made cuts from the original in
putting the work together for publication and in doing so sanctioned others
doing the same if the need or feeling arose.
CD track 30
0-571-52526-1 Vocal score
0-571-51102-3 Full score
The World of the Spirit (1938) for SATB soloists, speaker(s), chorus and orchestra
42’
CH76538 Vocal score
CH76527 Full score
Scoring: 2 (II=picc),2,2,2; 4,2,3,1; perc (1) (cymb, susp cymb, gong, sd, bd,
tamb); timps; harp; organ; strings
Text: various authors compiled by R. Ellis Roberts
Publisher: Chester Music
Difficulty level: 3-4 (choir)
This unusual and in many ways remarkable work was the second quasi cantata
Britten wrote specifically for BBC radio (the other is The Company of Heaven
– see separate entry). The performing version published in 2001 makes
suggested cuts (by Donald Mitchell) in the extensive readings which form a
critically important part of the performance. A short prologue featuring the
all-important plainsong chant Veni Creator Spiritus, which many will know as
the hymn tune sung to the words ‘Come Holy Ghost our souls inspire’, opens
the work, appears several times throughout and returns at the end in a fully
worked out arrangement. In between these points the speakers read a variety
of texts mostly on the subject of peace, generosity of spirit, forgiveness, joy in
faith, steadfastness in adversity and the overarching importance of loving one’s
neighbour – a common thread through Britten’s life reaching its climax in the
composition of the War Requiem. Following the readings there are a number
of movements for chorus, for soloists, and with a variety of accompaniments –
sometimes organ alone, sometimes a small instrumental group, and sometimes
the full orchestra.
One of the most interesting aspects of the work is the youthful Britten’s (he
was 24) musical responses to the words he was setting. There are points at
which one unequivocally notes Britten’s familiar language which was just in
the process of development. Others, though, seem almost to parody other
composers. The second movement (O Thou that movest all), basically a
hymn, is almost pure Mendelssohn in its lush chromaticisms. He just avoids it
becoming pastiche, but it sets a non-threatening tone to the soundworld in the
early stages of the work. The next movement (The sun, the moon, the stars)
has a wonderful sweep to it – almost a tidal motion, perhaps suggestive of
his increasing obsession with the sea. It is a beautiful movement. This is my
commandment which follows the next readings takes its cue (literally) from the
words ‘and after the fire a still small voice’. The utter stillness of this movement
is breathtaking and it segues into the next movement With wide-embracing
love which is an unashamedly romantic waltz. It is actually in 6/8 but the pulse
is so slow that it could be easily taken for 3/4. And that concludes Part I.
Part II begins with the fifth movement O life, O love, now undivided. This uses
the melody of the Mendelssohnian hymn from the second movement but
very differently presented. Over static string chords the tune is sung in unison
and the phrase ends are punctuated by harp chords which are a pre-echo of
similar treatments in Saint Nicolas for instance. This highly effective movement
develops beautifully. In the second verse the choir harmonises the melody
accompanied by lower strings but still having its phrase ends coloured by harp
and upper string chords. Finally, the soprano soloist joins fulfilling a gently
descanting role. Next comes a section of varied readings interspersed by short
vocal phrases for the soloists accompanied by organ. This section is more about
the spoken word than about the music. The ‘doxology’ to this section, which is
what the next movement (The spirit of the Lord) feels like, begins reflectively
but suddenly becomes an ecstatically dancing Alleluia. This big movement is
the last of Part II.
20
Choral Music from the Operas
A number of choral pieces have been extracted from Britten’s operas either
by Britten himself or by others after his death. They make unusual and highly
varied concert items.
Carry her over the water (1939/41) from the Operetta Paul Bunyan op.17
SSATTBB
2’
‘Nonsense’ replies Johnny, ‘It’s quite easy, and the longer it is, the more
she’ll like it. Use the longest words you can think of. Like this:’
...and so the song begins and Johnny proceeds to sing every long word he can
think of. It’s amusing and rather touching. The chorus of men, when they enter,
play up to the procession of verbosity in a duet with the soloist and the whole
song ends with the quite simple (at last) declaration: ‘I love you.’
arranged by Colin Matthews from an ensemble in Act II scene 2
Text: W H Auden
Publisher: Faber Music
Difficulty level: 1-2
This is not a particularly easy piece to programme as you need the forces listed
above and the piece is only five minutes long. But it is a delightful novelty if the
right context can be found.
This simple and beautifully effective chorus in three verses is entirely chordal
with a short section in verse two for upper voices. Only the altos don’t divide,
but the division of all the other voices give this short piece a richness which
sounds lovely when Britten’s performance directions are observed (dynamics,
articulation and word colour).
Lullaby of Dream Shadows (Paul Bunyan) (1939-41) CD track 34
0-571-50594-5 Choral score
Choral Dances from Gloriana (1953) version for SATB (1954) 9’
version for tenor solo, harp and chorus (1967, for the
opening of the Queen Elizabeth Hall, London) 11’
for chorus and orchestra
Chorus of 2 sopranos and 2 tenors for most of the number, but with a SATB
section at the end. Orchestra (Fl/picc, ob, cl, sax, b.cl, bsn/2 hns, 2 tpt, 2 trb,
tuba/timps/1 perc: SD, tri, susp.cym/harp/piano/strings)
Text: W H Auden
Publisher: Faber Music
9’/11’
Difficulty level: 2 (chorus)
The background to this extract from the original production of Paul Bunyan is
detailed under the entry for Inkslinger’s Love Song. This number was originally
the finale to Act 1 but was cut by Britten after the preview performance before
the first night.
Text: William Plomer
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2-3
These colourful pieces form a masque in the opera which was performed for
Queen Elizabeth I (Gloriana) on her visit to Norwich and performed by local
people for her entertainment and in loyal homage. Each short scena represents
a different group: Time, Concord, country girls, (S/A) young rustics and
fishermen (T/B) and a finale in which all pay homage to their Queen. In the
version for tenor solo with harp and chorus these movements are prefaced and
linked by the soloist with harp who sets the scene for each movement and, in
the final homage, joins the choir by adding a fifth vocal line (the harp also joins
this movement) which transforms the piece.
The sopranos and tenors have a conversation about the dullness of being
perpetually beautiful – the all-American beauty. ‘We’re very very tired of
admiration.’ Again, there is humour in the extract but also a serious message
which is underlined when a full chorus completes the number.
As for Inkslinger’s Love Song this is not an easy piece to programme and the
orchestra for this piece is much larger. There will always be situations which
arise, however, where these pieces are perfect for a given situation, and they
offer a lovely way of having a taste of Britten’s stage music when mounting the
whole work would be impractical.
These pieces make an ideal concert item and are not very difficult. They do
however need reasonably agile sopranos/altos for the Country Girls movement,
and a good balanced team of two tenors and two basses for the Rustics and
Fishermen. As with many of Britten’s choral works there is a lovely balance of
moods between the movements which helps to make a satisfying whole. The
Final Dance of Homage is particularly moving with its imitative lines moving
between voice-parts and building to an impassioned climax before subsiding
to a quiet ending.
Tallis’s Canon (from Noye’s Fludde) (1958) for SATB chorus, unison voices and organ or piano
accompaniment.
Difficulty level: 1
The magical arrangement of this well-known hymn tune which concludes
Noye’s Fludde is reduced to a single verse arrangement in the Cambridge
Hymnal No.34. As in the opera the words are Joseph Addison’s ‘The spacious
firmament on high’.
No. 5 Rustics and Fishermen
979-0-051-45017-6 Choral score (TTBB)
for tenor solo, T/B chorus, orchestra
3’
Text: Joseph Addison
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
979-0-060-01444-4 Vocal/piano score
979-0-060-01443-7 Choral score
Inkslinger’s Love Song (Paul Bunyan) (1939-41) 6’
978-0-521-20398-2 The Cambridge Hymnal (Cambridge University Press)
5’
Scoring: 2 tpt, 2 trb, tuba/1 perc (sd)/timps/harp/piano/strings
Text: W H Auden
Publisher: Faber Music
Two choruses from Peter Grimes (1945)
1. Song of the Fishermen (4’)
Difficulty level: 1 (for chorus)
‘Working Chorus’ from the opera Peter Grimes for SATB and
piano
Britten withdrew Paul Bunyan after its first performance and only revised it in
1974. At that time he omitted two numbers involving chorus: Inkslinger’s Love
Song and Lullaby of Dream Shadows. These were published as separate items
after Britten’s death.
Three of the four stanzas from Act I scene 1 and the fourth from Act III
This arrangement published 1947/48, arranger unknown
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 1
Paul Bunyan was the mythical lumberjack giant whose exploits helped create
the birth of the independent America. Auden described Inkslinger (Paul
Bunyan’s book-keeper) as: “the man of speculative and critical intelligence,
whose temptation is to despise those who do the manual work that makes the
life of thought possible... Inkslinger is the only person capable of understanding
who Paul Bunyan is, and, in a sense, the operetta is an account of his process of
discovery. ” Inkslinger finds himself called upon in this number to show how a
love song should be created. The chorus asks:
This is an inspired choice for an extract from one of Britten’s greatest
masterpieces. The piano part sets the peaceful scene at the end of another
hard-labouring, rough-hewn day of fishing involving the whole community
– men and women. The beautifully simple choral phrases exude both peace
and exhaustion. The different verses tell their story passionately building to
a powerful climax under which the rising and falling figuration in the piano
part mimics the rolling waves of the sea. It ends as it began, quietly using that
familiar Britten fingerprint of the rising and falling arpeggio of superimposed
thirds.
‘But how do you think we should address her?’ Johnny Inkslinger replies:
‘You must sing her a love song.’ ‘That’s too hard and takes too long.’
979-0-060-01530-4 Choral score
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2. Old Joe has gone fishing (2’)
Round for SATB chorus and piano
Extract (much arranged from both chorus and solo parts) from Act 1 scene
2 of Peter Grimes.
This arrangement published 1947/48, arranger unknown
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
Difficulty level: 2-3
The lively nature of this wonderfully exuberant piece makes a perfect foil for
the Song of the Fishermen described above. It is much more challenging to sing
but is well worth the effort of learning it. Choirs lap it up because it is such fun.
It is a round, and the first challenge is the 7/4 time signature – effectively 1/2;
1/2; 1/2/3. There are four melodies with their associated words. The first is ‘Old
Joe has gone fishing and Young Joe has gone fishing and You Know has gone
fishing and found them a shoal’. The second – completely different – is ‘Pull
them in in han’fuls and in canfuls and in panfuls’ with long notes. The third is a
fragmented phrase: ‘Bring them in sweetly/Gut them completely/Pack them up
neatly/Sell them discreetly.’ Lastly comes the most difficult of the four: ‘O haul
away!’ This is given a rising scale after a tie and a long held note after which the
scale falls again. The timing over the ties can cause problems. When all four
melodies are put together it is a real tour-de-force and the final page with the
top sopranos sailing up to a long top Bb and the basses right up on an Eb gives
it a terrific ‘wow’ factor. The divisi sopranos on the last page is the only time
parts divide in the piece.
979-0-060-01486-4 Choral score
© Paul Spicer
Lichfield, 2011
New Release
Britten Opera Choruses
A new collection in the Concerts for Choirs series, with
choruses selected from operas including Peter Grimes,
The Rape of Lucretia, Billy Budd, Gloriana and A Midsummer
Night’s Dream. Edited by David Wordsworth.
Published in Summer 2012
Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes
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Index of Titles
click below to go directly to each title
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A.M.D.G.
Advance Democracy
(Finale) Noel! (A Boy was Born)
“Ee-Oh!” (Friday Afternoons)
Amo Ergo Sum (Wedding Anthem)
Antiphon
As dew in Aprille (A Ceremony of Carols)
The Ballad of Green Broom (Five Flower Songs)
Ballad of Heroes
The Ballad of Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard
Balulalow (A Ceremony of Carols)
Begone, dull care (Friday Afternoons)
A Boy was Born
The Building of the House
Cantata academica, Carmen basiliense
Cantata misericordium
Carol (Sacred and Profane)
Carol of King Cnut (Christ’s Nativity)
Carry her over the water
A Ceremony of Carols
Children’s Crusade
Choral Dances from Gloriana
Chorale after an Old French Carol
Christ’s Nativity
The Company of Heaven
Cuckoo! (Friday Afternoons)
A death (Sacred and Profane)
Deo gracias (A Ceremony of Carols)
Deus in adjutorium meum…
The Evening Primrose (Five Flower Songs)
Fancie
Festival Te Deum
Fishing Song (Friday Afternoons)
Five Flower Songs
Friday Afternoons
God Save the Queen
God’s Grandeur (A.M.D.G.)
The Golden Vanity
Heaven-Haven (A.M.D.G.)
Herod (A Boy was Born)
Hymn to St. Cecilia
A Hymn of St. Columba
Hymn to St. Peter
A Hymn to the Virgin
I lov’d a lass (Two Part-Songs)
I mon waxe wod (Sacred and Profane)
I mun be married on Sunday (Friday Afternoons)
In Freezing Winter Night (A Ceremony of Carols)
In the bleak mid-winter (A Boy was Born)
Inkslinger’s Love Song
Jazz-Man (Friday Afternoons)
Jesu, as Thou art our saviour (A Boy was Born)
Jubilate Deo in C
Jubilate Deo in Eb
King Herod and the Cock
Lenten is come (Sacred and Profane)
Lift Boy (Two Part-Songs)
Lone Dog (Friday Afternoons)
The long night (Sacred and Profane)
Lullaby of Dream Shadows
Lullay, Jesu (A Boy was Born)
Marsh Flower (Five Flower Songs)
Missa Brevis in D
The National Anthem
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New Prince (Christ’s Nativity)
A New Year Carol (Friday Afternoons)
O can ye sew cushions?
O Deus, ego amo te (A.M.D.G.)
Old Abram Brown (Friday Afternoons)
Old Joe has gone fishing (Peter Grimes)
The Oxen
Philip’s Breeches
Praise We Great Men
Prayer 1 (A.M.D.G.)
Prayer II (A.M.D.G.)
Preparations (Christ’s Nativity)
Procession (A Ceremony of Carols)
Psalm 70 (Deus in adjutorium meum…)
Psalm 95 (Venite Exultemus Domino)
Psalm 130
Psalm 150 (1931)
Psalm 150 (1962)
The Rainbow (Three two-part songs)
Recession (A Ceremony of Carols)
Rejoice in the Lamb
The Ride-by-nights (Three two-part songs)
Rosa Mystica (A.M.D.G.)
Rossini Suite
Sacred and Profane
Saint Nicolas
Shepherd’s Carol
The Ship of Rio (Three two-part songs)
The Soldier (A.M.D.G.)
Song of the Fishermen (Peter Grimes)
Spring Carol (A Ceremony of Carols)
Spring Symphony
St. Godrick’s Hymn (Sacred and Profane)
The Succession of the Four Sweet Months (Five Flower Songs)
Sweet was the song (Christ’s Nativity)
The Sycamore Tree
Tallis’s Canon
Te Deum in C
That yongë child (A Ceremony of Carols)
There is no rose (A Ceremony of Carols)
There was a man of Newington (Friday Afternoons)
There was a monkey (Friday Afternoons)
This little babe (A Ceremony of Carols)
The Three Kings (A Boy was Born)
Three two-part songs
To Daffodils (Five Flower Songs)
A tragic story (Friday Afternoons)
The Twelve Apostles
Two Part-Songs
Two Psalms
The useful plough (Friday Afternoons)
Venite Exultemus Domino
Voices for Today
War Requiem
A Wealden Trio
We are the darkness in the heat of the day
A Wedding Anthem
Welcome Ode
Whoso dwelleth under the Defence of the Most High
Wolcum Yule! (A Ceremony of Carols)
The World of the Spirit
Ye that pasen by (Sacred and Profane)
Yif ic of luve can (Sacred and Profane)
© Britten-Pears Foundation 2011
Main text: © Paul Spicer 2011
Editorial: David Allenby
Layout: Schott Music Ltd
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A special centenary logo has been created for use in association with any
Britten event between September 2012 and August 2014: the two full seasons
either side of the centenary year 2013.
For more information see
www.britten100.org
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